Advice for judiciaries: Difference between revisions
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Juho Kunsola (talk | contribs) (= Deniability of audio recordings by living people = Recordings that look like people and recordings of that sounds like someone saying something may not be genuine and therefore the suspect should be allowed to state to the court "I did never say that th) |
Juho Kunsola (talk | contribs) (+ == Proving denied audio recordings == + If '''media forensics''' proves beyond suspicion the genuinity of the media in question or if credible witness to its creation is found...) |
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= Deniability of audio recordings by living people = | = Deniability of audio recordings by living people = | ||
Recordings of that sounds like someone saying something may not be genuine and therefore the suspect should be allowed to state to the court "I did never say that thing you got on tape." | Recordings of that sounds like someone saying something may not be genuine and therefore the suspect should be allowed to state to the court "I did never say that thing you got on tape." | ||
== Proving denied audio recordings == | |||
* If '''[[Glossary#Media forensics|media forensics]]''' proves beyond suspicion the genuinity of the media in question or if credible witness to its creation is found, the media should be considered proof of person X having actually said that to a microphone. |
Revision as of 21:42, 4 April 2019
Deniability of audio recordings by living people
Recordings of that sounds like someone saying something may not be genuine and therefore the suspect should be allowed to state to the court "I did never say that thing you got on tape."
Proving denied audio recordings
- If media forensics proves beyond suspicion the genuinity of the media in question or if credible witness to its creation is found, the media should be considered proof of person X having actually said that to a microphone.