Deepfakes are like a clever disguise that makes people look like they're saying or doing things they never actually said or did.
Imagine you have a photo of your friend, and you want to make it look like they’re talking to a robot. You could draw their mouth moving on the photo, but that would take a long time. Deepfakes use a special kind of computer trick called artificial intelligence, which is like having a super-smart helper who can copy how someone’s face moves when they talk.
How deepfakes work
Deepfakes start with lots of videos or photos of a person's face. The computer learns how their face moves, like how your eyes blink, your mouth opens and closes, and your head turns. Then it uses that knowledge to create new videos where the person seems to be saying different things.
It’s kind of like having a robot that copies your friend’s face movements exactly, but instead of drawing, the robot uses computers to make everything look real.
Why they are becoming a concern
Deepfakes can be used to trick people into believing fake news or even fake speeches. Imagine seeing a video where your favorite teacher says something silly, it could make you laugh, but if someone uses deepfakes to trick grown-ups, that might cause big problems too!
Examples
- A deepfake is like a magic trick where someone's face is made to look like they're saying something else, even if they never said it.
- Imagine your friend’s face on a video of a famous person talking, that's a deepfake!
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See also
- How do AI image generators create realistic pictures?
- How Can Computers Think?
- How do AI image generators create such realistic art?
- How Do Computers Understand Language?
- How Do Computers Actually Understand Language?