Deepfake videos trick people by making it look like someone is saying or doing something they're not, kind of like when a puppeteer makes a puppet talk, but nobody sees the strings.
Deepfake works like this: Imagine you have a picture of your friend’s face, and you want to make it look like they’re talking about pizza. A computer takes many photos or videos of their face moving in different ways, smiling, frowning, blinking, and then puts those movements onto another person's face in a new video. It's like giving a puppet a new voice and making it talk.
How deepfakes mislead
Deepfakes can be used to make people believe false things, like a politician saying something silly or dangerous. It feels real because the face moves just like it normally would, no magic, just clever computer work.
What can catch them
Sometimes, you can tell a deepfake is fake if the eyes blink in an odd way or if the person's lips don’t quite match their words. Special tools can also check for tiny mistakes that our eyes might miss, like how light reflects on skin or how someone’s head moves when they talk.
You can think of it like this: It’s like watching a robot dressed up as your friend, at first, it looks real, but if you get close and look carefully, you’ll see it's not quite the same.
Examples
- A deepfake video makes a celebrity say something they never said, tricking people into believing it.
- A political candidate’s face is swapped with someone else’s in a campaign ad.
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See also
- How do deepfake videos trick our eyes and ears?
- How are deepfake videos created and detected?
- How do deepfake videos work and what makes them convincing?
- How does deepfake technology create realistic but artificial videos?
- How do deepfake videos work and can you spot them easily?