KAIST Unveils Deepfake-detecting Mobile App | Be Korea-savvy

KAIST Unveils Deepfake-detecting Mobile App


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SEOUL, March 30 (Korea Bizwire)The Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (KAIST) said Tuesday its research team launched the country’s first mobile app that detects deepfakes — images or videos digitally manipulated with artificial intelligence (AI) — to curb misinformation and prevent potential harm to victims targeted by the technology.

The software, named KaiCatch, can accurately detect deepfakes by using AI technology that recognizes abnormal distortions in a subject’s face in images, according to KAIST, South Korea’s top science and technology university.

App users can upload images or frames of videos on the app, which calculates the likelihood of the image being manipulated for 2,000 won (US$1.76) per image, according to KAIST’s Lee Heung-kyu, a professor at the school of computing, who is behind KaiCatch.

Lee said he has developed image manipulation detection software since 2015, collecting a mass database of images and video data.

Provided by KAIST on March 30, 2021, these sample images -- the original at top and a manipulated version at bottom -- show how KaiCatch detects image manipulation. The software analyzes details of the subject's face to detect signs of manipulation.

Provided by KAIST on March 30, 2021, these sample images — the original at top and a manipulated version at bottom — show how KaiCatch detects image manipulation. The software analyzes details of the subject’s face to detect signs of manipulation.

The researcher expects KaiCatch to help the broader public detect deepfakes, which have become a major concern in South Korea as they have been used to create porn involving female celebrities.

A petition on the presidential office’s website early this year, which called for strong punishment against deepfake porn users, earned over 390,000 signatures.

“This is just the starting point for KaiCatch,” Lee said. “We plan to keep updating the software to detect new deepfake technology.”

KaiCatch is currently only available on the Android operating system in Korean, but Lee said his team is planning to release an iOS version for Apple users and support other languages, including English, Chinese and Japanese.

(Yonhap)

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