Tom was the first to post the video to Reddit and YouTube and sent over examples of his data set and process for making deepfakes. “With the Bill Hader video, half of the people who comment don’t know it’s modified,” said Tom, a graphic illustrator from the Czech Republic who created the video, and who asked that NBC News not use his last name out of privacy concerns. But the Hader-Schwarzenegger video, along with other celebrity-based videos, have become a sort of test run and public service announcement, heightening public awareness of deepfake technology and also making sure some deepfakes have trouble getting monetized. Videos of politicians could be easily manipulated to portray them as saying things they never really said. ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() The emergence of these videos has led to growing concern that they could be used to spread a new, powerful form of misinformation ahead of the 2020 elections.
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