Team Rangar
Deepfakes are not just a simple deception; they are a disinformation weapon with tangible consequences that affect social stability, the economy, and private life.
They clone a CEO or executive's voice and instruct finance staff to make urgent bank transfers to fraudulent accounts.
Use of fake videos/audios of business leaders to artificially manipulate stock prices of large companies.
Creation of fake video profiles to impersonate business partners and gain access to sensitive data or credentials.
Creation of fake videos of politicians making inflammatory statements. The content is released during the "October Surprise Factor" (just before elections), making timely verification impossible.
The public doubts all official audiovisual communications (whether real or fake), weakening institutional authority and faith in objective truth.
Deepfake videos showing national leaders making threats or aggressive statements can escalate international tensions, leading to unnecessary conflicts.
The most common misuse (over 90% of malicious content). Creation of fake sexual videos without consent, causing irreversible psychological and professional trauma, disproportionately affecting women.
Use of fake compromising videos to force victims to pay money, act under coercion, or commit illegal acts.
Defamation through videos or audios that expose individuals to bullying, discrimination, or job loss.
When a real and damning video emerges, the accused can simply deny it claiming: 'It's a deepfake!'. The technology becomes a shield for the guilty.
Deepfakes undermine the validity of image and video as irrefutable evidence in justice systems, journalism, and historical records.
Lawyers can now easily challenge any video or audio evidence by claiming it is a deepfake, regardless of whether they have proof. This introduces permanent uncertainty into the legal system and greatly complicates the pursuit of justice based on digital evidence.
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