Deepfake: Unstable Evidence on Screen
Moving image media is more susceptible than ever to manipulations that make it hard to separate fact from fiction and truth from illusion. Machine-learning technology has enabled the creation of 鈥渄eepfakes鈥: videos that intentionally distort or fabricate events. Deepfakes have entered the moving image ecosystem at a particularly vulnerable moment: social media creates the opportunity for any video to be shared widely and immediately, and believed or contested based on entrenched points of view. This exhibition presents a variety of media that demonstrate the instability of on-screen truths, and places them in a historical continuum from the late 19th through the early 21st centuries. While the exhibition identifies the dangers presented by deepfakes and other forms of synthetic media, it also acknowledges the possibilities inherent in their prosocial applications.
The centerpiece of Deepfake is In Event of Moon Disaster, a startlingly convincing video co-directed by Francesca Panetta and Halsey Burgund that uses deepfake technology to suppose an alternate history of the Apollo 11 mission, presented on a television set in a period-appointed living room. In Event of Moon Disaster is an MIT Center for Advanced Virtuality production. The project won an Emmy Award for Outstanding Interactive Media: Documentary earlier this year.
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Moving image media is more susceptible than ever to manipulations that make it hard to separate fact from fiction and truth from illusion. Machine-learning technology has enabled the creation of 鈥渄eepfakes鈥: videos that intentionally distort or fabricate events. Deepfakes have entered the moving image ecosystem at a particularly vulnerable moment: social media creates the opportunity for any video to be shared widely and immediately, and believed or contested based on entrenched points of view. This exhibition presents a variety of media that demonstrate the instability of on-screen truths, and places them in a historical continuum from the late 19th through the early 21st centuries. While the exhibition identifies the dangers presented by deepfakes and other forms of synthetic media, it also acknowledges the possibilities inherent in their prosocial applications.
The centerpiece of Deepfake is In Event of Moon Disaster, a startlingly convincing video co-directed by Francesca Panetta and Halsey Burgund that uses deepfake technology to suppose an alternate history of the Apollo 11 mission, presented on a television set in a period-appointed living room. In Event of Moon Disaster is an MIT Center for Advanced Virtuality production. The project won an Emmy Award for Outstanding Interactive Media: Documentary earlier this year.
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