Adobe is using machine learning to make it easier to spot Photoshopped images

A famous <a href="https://links.ifttt.com/wf/click?upn=47Ma65zk15Dxq4ShPEq4x5DN3vfNNEvyrJaeG3QfESgofJTCRXUB8-2FFamLLmKpAQS8Nngf-2FLdEHzy3Gf-2Fb-2FXiQ-3D-3D_HPVzg25ZAkgu-2F4HyWWfVP6O8U-2BLp9VGbZ-2FbbtKwP4xvZcSkfgt9vrxtgBenb5BWjCxVHD3L2Rmvxh-2Fikxoy7CDej28IHkcPD5LoocePvqSqeOcCO6fWFgX-2BJbF9L7qPFkD3H4bJt-2FiUJKMOcnj9k0RBxhgvXTNyw5nNrmejuUkLUwj1dvMfnKU04UovSyFamCoALzgIC2ET-2Fr7BKNH1hYeLz85R1rAqASF0fn3np-2B-2BKIlYDmPPPqu3cHcbmqzauJO-2FFB-2FNe6iR4kJJRXqMDfJT6BUYJ2tbc6YzVrgoFF32wpWIQAc97mwjvERRpwqvRt" target="_blank">edited image of a missile launch</a> released by the Iranian government in 2008. (This image was not used in the training or testing of Adobe

Experts around the world are getting increasingly worried about new AI tools that make it easier than ever to edit images and videos — especially with social media's power to share shocking content quickly and without fact-checking. Some of those tools are being developed by Adobe, but the company is also working on an antidote of sorts by researching how machine learning can be used to automatically spot edited pictures.

The company's latest work, showcased this month at the CVPR computer vision conference, demonstrates how digital forensics done by humans can be automated by machines in much less time. The research paper does not represent a breakthrough in the field, and it's not yet available as a commercial product, but it's...

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