Synthetic human-like fakes: Difference between revisions

→‎Handwriting syntheses: + If the handwriting-like synthesis passes human and media forensics testing, it is a '''digital handwrite-alike'''
mNo edit summary
(→‎Handwriting syntheses: + If the handwriting-like synthesis passes human and media forensics testing, it is a '''digital handwrite-alike''')
Line 245: Line 245:
# Defensively, to hide one's handwriting style from public view
# Defensively, to hide one's handwriting style from public view
# Offensively, to thieve somebody else's handwriting style
# Offensively, to thieve somebody else's handwriting style
If the handwriting-like synthesis passes human and media forensics testing, it is a '''digital handwrite-alike'''.


Here we find a similar '''risk''' to that which realized when the '''[[w:speaker recognition]] systems''' turning out to be instrumental in the development of '''[[#Digital sound-alikes|digital sound-alikes]]'''. After the knowledge needed to recognize a speaker was [[w:Transfer learning|w:transferred]] into a generative task in 2018 by Google researchers, we no longer cannot effectively determine for English speakers which recording is human in origin and which is from a machine origin.
Here we find a similar '''risk''' to that which realized when the '''[[w:speaker recognition]] systems''' turning out to be instrumental in the development of '''[[#Digital sound-alikes|digital sound-alikes]]'''. After the knowledge needed to recognize a speaker was [[w:Transfer learning|w:transferred]] into a generative task in 2018 by Google researchers, we no longer cannot effectively determine for English speakers which recording is human in origin and which is from a machine origin.