Blockchain Might Be a Silver Bullet for Fighting Deepfakes

Published at: Dec. 16, 2019

In an era of scams and fake news, so-called “deepfakes” are the latest assault on our relationship with reality.

If you’re unfamiliar, deepfakes are videos generated with help from artificial intelligence that show a recognizable figure (like Barack Obama or Mark Zuckerberg, for example) saying things that they’ve never actually said. By putting false words in the mouths of prominent, powerful people, deepfakes are a perceived threat purportedly true information.

But if there’s one thing we know about blockchain, the database technology that props up popular cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin and Ethereum, we know that it excels at verifying and confirming what is real. Did Alice actually send Bob $100 of crypto? That’s an easy confirmation to make with access to an open blockchain.

Now a 72-page report issued by Witness Media Lab goes in depth on the tools that stand a chance to push back against the threat of deepfakes, and blockchain is one of them. It’s not the first time this idea has been floated, but it’s certainly one of the more thoughtful explanations we’ve seen.

The general idea goes like this: images, videos, and audio can be cryptographically signed, geotagged, and timestamped to establish their origins. This kind of “verified capture” calls for applications to perform a number of checks, ensuring that transmitted data conforms with the source material. That media can be assigned a cryptographic hash based on the image or audio data it contains — comparing that source hash to another in search of any mismatches will easily tell you if the media has been manipulated or not.

In other words, blockchain can verify source media against copycats or outright manipulations the same way it verifies crypto transactions. But this isn’t a totally bulletproof approach — it effectively calls for us to put trust in a technical system without considering its limits. The report cites media forensics expert Hany Farid saying that any finished blockchain solution for fighting deepfakes is still years away due to the complexity involved here.

Blockchains are still vulnerable to sophisticated attacks against their governance structures, or the notorious 51% attacks that have caused problems for the crypto community in the past. But there’s enough promise here that people are taking note. We got in touch with Corin Faife, senior coordinator for Witness, who offered a useful analogy:

When we buy food from a supermarket, we generally expect it to be packaged in such a way that it can't be tampered with — sealed plastic, stickers over the wrapper, and so on. It doesn't guarantee the food will be perfect: it still might not taste good, and we can't prevent it from spoiling if you leave it out too long, but what you do know is that the package hasn't been interfered with on its way to you.

Faife continued: “These authenticity measures propose something similar for video: it's not an ultimate guarantee of truth and shouldn't be taken as an endorsement of the content itself, but it does allow you to confirm that a media item hasn't been tampered with on its way to you from the original point of capture.”

At a time when deepfake technology seems to only be improving, it’s good to know that we have tools left in our figurative toolbelt for pushing back against them.

Tags
Related Posts
Hong Kongers use blockchain to save evidence of anti-authoritarian struggles
Blockchain’s potential to sustain a distributed, tamper-proof infrastructure for collective digital memory has taken on an unexpected political salience for citizens in Hong Kong. Soon after Hong Kong’s public broadcaster Radio Television Hong Kong, or RTHK, revealed its intent to erase any archived content older than one year, residents hurried to save a trove of past news footage that had until now been freely available to the public. The reason for their haste was the recognition that RTHK’s archive contains critical coverage of the recent years of anti-authoritarian struggles and protests that were initially sparked by the introduction of the …
Decentralization / May 27, 2021
Crossing the crypto chasm: Paving the way to mass adoption
Since its inception in 2009, cryptocurrency has become both a cultural and financial phenomenon. As news headlines tout its ever-increasing exchange values and disruptive potential, investors and banking experts have gone into a frenzy. And yet, while digital money is on a lot of people’s minds, there is still a lack of understanding about what it is and what it can do among mainstream consumers. This is because cryptocurrency is a discontinuous or disruptive innovation, and its adoption demands significant consumer behavior changes and the infrastructure of supporting businesses. In order to succeed and get closer to the point of …
Adoption / Feb. 23, 2021
Marshall Islands President Survives No Confidence Vote Prompted by National Crypto Plans
The President of the Republic of the Marshall Islands Hilda Heine has narrowly survived a no confidence vote that was partly prompted by her plans to introduce a national digital currency, Asia-focused English-language publication Nikkei Asian Review reports Nov. 12. The Marshallese parliament was reportedly split 16-16, just one vote short of the number needed to prompt Heine to resign the office of president. The country’s parliament had initially backed the creation of a national digital currency, called the Sovereign (SOV), in February of this year, to be distributed and used along with the U.S. dollar, the country’s mainstream currency. …
Adoption / Nov. 12, 2018
Denver Municipal Election: Another Small Stop on the Road to Universal Blockchain Voting
On March 7, news broke that Denver is slated to become the second United States jurisdiction to pilot a blockchain-powered mobile voting platform in its upcoming municipal election. Absentee voting will start on March 23 and will run until the Election Day, May 7. The announcement came almost exactly one year after the first initiative of this kind — deployment of mobile voting solution in West Virginia primaries and then midterm elections — was made public in March 2018. Once again, it was the Tusk Philanthropy foundation that spearheaded the effort, while Boston-based technology company Voatz took care of the …
Blockchain / March 18, 2019
How blockchain archives can change how we record history in wartime
Decentralized blockchain technology has been around for a relatively short period of time, in the grand scheme of things, but its decentralized nature has the power to keep data and information out of the hands of censors looking to create a “safe” and “faultless” version of history. Blockchain is permissionless and literally owned by no one. So, while we can’t save the Alexandria libraries of the past, we can make sure the future is well equipped with the tools necessary to preserve historical records. Here we’ll look at some of the ways nonfungible tokens (NFT) and blockchain technology have been …
Adoption / May 12, 2022