> From: Andrew Crystall <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

> On 14 May 2002 at 19:52, The Fool wrote:
> 
> > http://www.monbiot.com/dsp_article.cfm?article_id=510
> > 
> > Companies are creating false citizens to try to change the way we
> > think 
> 
> And not only companies. And some of us bother to use deacent fake 
> ID's, understand the term "proxy server" and work to a plan.
> 
> How real is the news you watched last night? How unbiased is todays 
> science? The answers are generally chilling.
> 
> Who's playing with YOUR information flow?

Everyone?

http://www.ananova.com/news/story/sm_588701.html

Video technique gets people to mouth sentences they didn't use  
A new technique lets video makers make it appear their subjects are
mouthing sentences they never spoke.
Researchers from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology taped a woman
speaking.
They then reprocessed the footage into a new video showing her mouthing
entirely new sentences.
The inventors say the technique could be used in video games and movie
special effects to feature dead stars but warn the technology could also
be used for fraud and propaganda.
At present it can't generate new audio.
Demetri Terzopoulos, from New York University told the Boston Globe:
"This is really groundbreaking work, but we are on a collision course
with ethics. If you can make people say things they didn't say, then
potentially all hell breaks loose."
Kathleen Hall Jamieson from the University of Pennsylvania added: "There
is a certain point at which you raise the level of distrust to where it
is hard to communicate through the medium. There are people who still
believe the moon landing was staged."
The technique only currently works on a video of a person facing a camera
and not moving much, and uses artificial intelligence to teach a machine
what a person looks like when they're talking.
The researchers are scheduled to present a paper on their work in July at
Siggraph, the world's top computer graphics conference.
A specialist can still detect the video forgeries, but as the technology
improves, scientists predict video authentication will become a growing
field, in the courts and elsewhere, just like the authentication of
photographs.

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