What may appear to be an image of Tacoma, US, it is, in fact, a simulated one. Welcome to the brand new world of deepfake satellite images. washington.edu/news/2021/04/2…
“This isn’t just Photoshopping things. It’s making data look uncannily realistic,” said Bo Zhao, assistant professor of geography at the UW and lead author of the study (2/...)
This simplified illustration shows how a simulated satellite image (right) can be generated by putting a base map (City A) into a deepfake satellite image model. This model is created by distinguish a group of base map and satellite image pairs from a second city (City B). (3/..)
Experts already warned for years that deep fakes images of Earth could be used to trick military analysts into seeing objects that aren't really there dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/ar…
What is the point of Fake Satellite Images? Next few tweets will tell (8/8)
“The National Geospatial-Intelligance Agency (NGA) is one of the most important agencies in the U.S. that you've probably never heard of.
The NGA gives information to the president and his cabinet on counterterrorism and weapons of mass destruction.” photographytalk.com/china-is-a-wor… (9/.)
“Satellite imagery is constantly being used by militaries in order to gain tactical advantages over other countries.” (10/10)
Personally, I see a big difference in impact of deep fake geography versus deep fake videos and photos. The next tweets even explain why (11/..)
A deepfake photo or video which seems to be unique can't be compared to other sources because they don't exist. A deepfake sat images can easily be compared to other images: by double checking the area with an satellite (12/...)
So this “simcity 2030” game of deception probably only works to deceive people who can't double-check the info. Most intelligence services can (13/..)
End of rant(14/14)
• • •
Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to
force a refresh
Here is a little test, inspired by last few tweets. Is this fake or not? #osint#quiz
The point of this exercise was not to quote @variety , but put the nr 4241 of the billboard in a database , Nice work @sutbrod. Intriguing question: who paid for his? The studio? Real fans?
Do you have a company? Did you visit businessinsider.com ? Cool! This is what they did: (1/3)
Linking a Chamber of Commerce number to an IP address? Wow. Maybe they automatically put your IP into tools like domaintools.com, and if they see a company, they cross-reference that with the chamber of commerce database (2/3)
Anyway, if you do this sneaky spying on corporate users, you probably shouldn't brag about this. I found the information on the Dutch version: businessinsider.nl/adverteren-bij… (3/3)
Here is a nice verification exercise. @DrIsaPantami
the Nigerian communication minister is reported to be on a US watchlist and is trending in Nigeria. Is this a rumor or truth? Start with this article: niyitabiti.net/2021/04/us-pla…
Explain why you think this is correct or not (2/..)
Try to work two ways: can you find the original source (patient zero) who said it first? And can you find stuff from US gov that supports the claim? (3/3)
I suggest the energy company @Essent takes better care of its customer records. I'm currently giving a dark web course and we stumbled on somebody who claims he is selling 2.000.000 records of customers. Next tweets: how and why? (1/...)
The @essent records are sold for 0.07 € a piece and can be filtered on anything you want: age, place, male, female, date of the contract. The illegally obtained records contain phone nr, e-mail, full name, birthdate and IBAN (2/...)
The 2.000.000 @essent confidential customer records are, according to the seller, sold to "mapsers, call centers, "schetsers and oplichters" (= swindlers) and to use to convince bonkers (=victims)" The seller uses a photo of @essent office in Telegram (3/3)