Deepfakes, shallow epistemic gravesOn the epistemic robustness of photography and videos in the era of deepfakes

被引:0
|
作者
Paloma Atencia-Linares
Marc Artiga
机构
[1] UNED,Dpto. Lógica Historia y Filosofía de la Ciencia
[2] Universitat de València,Dpto. Filosofia
来源
Synthese | / 200卷
关键词
Epistemic value; Photography; Signals; Deepfakes; Deception; Images; Animal communication;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The recent proliferation of deepfakes and other digitally produced deceptive representations has revived the debate on the epistemic robustness of photography and other mechanically produced images. Authors such as Rini (2020) and Fallis (2021) claim that the proliferation of deepfakes pose a serious threat to the reliability and the epistemic value of photographs and videos. In particular, Fallis adopts a Skyrmsian account of how signals carry information (Skyrms, 2010) to argue that the existence of deepfakes significantly reduces the information that images carry about the world, which undermines their reliability as a source of evidence. In this paper, we focus on Fallis’ version of the challenge, but our results can be generalized to address similar pessimistic views such as Rini’s. More generally, we offer an account of the epistemic robustness of photography and videos that allows us to understand these systems of representation as continuous with other means of information transmission we find in nature. This account will then give us the necessary tools to put Fallis’ claims into perspective: using a richer approach to animal signaling based on the signaling model of communication (Maynard-Smith and Harper, 2003), we will claim that, while it might be true that deepfake technology increases the probability of obtaining false positives, the dimension of the epistemic threat involved might still be negligible.
引用
收藏
相关论文
共 9 条
  • [1] Deepfakes, shallow epistemic graves On the epistemic robustness of photography and videos in the era of deepfakes
    Atencia-Linares, Paloma
    Artiga, Marc
    SYNTHESE, 2022, 200 (06)
  • [2] Deepfakes and the Epistemic Backstop
    Rini, Regina
    PHILOSOPHERS IMPRINT, 2020, 20 (24): : 1 - 16
  • [3] Deepfakes and the epistemic apocalypse
    Joshua Habgood-Coote
    Synthese, 201
  • [4] The Epistemic Threat of Deepfakes
    Fallis D.
    Philosophy & Technology, 2021, 34 (4) : 623 - 643
  • [5] Deepfakes and the epistemic apocalypse
    Habgood-Coote, Joshua
    SYNTHESE, 2023, 201 (03)
  • [6] VR, Deepfakes and Epistemic Security
    Aliman, Nadisha-Marie
    Kester, Leon
    2022 IEEE INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE AND VIRTUAL REALITY (AIVR), 2022, : 97 - 102
  • [7] The identification game: deepfakes and the epistemic limits of identity
    Carl Öhman
    Synthese, 200
  • [8] The identification game: deepfakes and the epistemic limits of identity
    Ohman, Carl
    SYNTHESE, 2022, 200 (04)
  • [9] Do deepfake videos undermine our epistemic trust? A thematic analysis of tweets that discuss deepfakes in the Russian invasion of Ukraine
    Twomey, John
    Ching, Didier
    Aylett, Matthew Peter
    Quayle, Michael
    Linehan, Conor
    Murphy, Gillian
    PLOS ONE, 2023, 18 (10):