Anonymous ID: 4ba691 Nov. 13, 2023, 5:16 a.m. No.19908372   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8415

top kek

The fear and panic on the fake news libtard's faces

"Trump is a moderate in our movement"

 

Human Events

@HumanEvents

11h

FULL Honey Badger

Jack Poso 🇺🇸

@JackPosobiec

11h

BANNON: You don’t get it. Donald Trump is a moderate in our movement.In future years, you’re going to wish you had him back

 

Nov 13, 2023 · 1:31 AM UTC

 

Jack Poso 🇺🇸

@JackPosobiec

11h

Bannon just LIT UP this douchelib journo 🔥🔥🔥

Tux Zito canine reporter

 

Nov 13, 2023 · 1:20 AM UTC

Anonymous ID: 4ba691 Nov. 13, 2023, 5:42 a.m. No.19908445   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8497 >>8517 >>8569

>>19908029

>Unconfirmed reports indicate that several United States soldiers HAVE BEEN KILLED by resistance forces in Syria..

>>19908404

>Microsoft, Meta reveal plans to combat so-called ‘election disinformation’ using ‘fact checkers’

 

 

Microsoft, Meta reveal plans to combat so-called ‘election disinformation’ using ‘fact checkers’

Microsoft has developed a 5-step 'Election Protection Commitments' plan to be rolled out in the US and other places where 'critical' elections will take place.

 

And so it begins. In fact, it hardly ever stops – another election cycle in well on its way in the U.S. But what has emerged these last few years, and what continues to crop up the closer the election day gets, is the role of the most influential social platforms/tech companies.

 

Pressure on them is sometimes public, but mostly not, as the Twitter Files have taught us; and it is with this in mind that various announcements about combating “election disinformation” coming from Big Tech should be viewed.

 

READ: House report reveals gov’t colluded to censor ‘thousands’ of conservative posts before 2020 election

 

Although, one can never discount the possibility that some – say, Microsoft – are doing it quite voluntarily. That company has now come out with what it calls “new steps to protect elections,” and is framing this concern for election integrity more broadly than just the goings-on in the U.S.

 

From the EU to India and many, many places in between, elections will be held over the next year or so, says Microsoft; however, these democratic processes are at peril.

 

“While voters exercise this right, another force is also at work to influence and possibly interfere with the outcomes of these consequential contests,” said a blog post co-authored by Microsoft Vice Chair and President Brad Smith.

 

By “another force,” could Smith possibly mean, Big Tech? No. It’s “multiple authoritarian nation states” he’s talking about, and Microsoft’s “Election Protection Commitments” seek to counter that threat in a 5-step plan to be deployed in the U.S., and elsewhere where “critical” elections are to be held.

 

Critical more than others? Why and what is Microsoft seeking to protect? It’s all very unclear.

 

But one of the measures is the Content Credentials digital metadata scheme, similar tomeme stamp watermarking.However, considering that the most widely used browser, Chrome, is not signed up to the group(C2PA) that spawned Content Credentials, the question remains how helpful it will be to political campaigns using this tech in their images or videos, “to show how, when, and by whom the content was created or edited, including if it was generated by AI.”

 

Meta (Facebook) also announced its own effort in the same vein, seeking to combat altered content such as deepfakes – in case they “merge, combine, replace, and/or superimpose content onto a video, creating a video that appears authentic (and) would likely mislead an average person.”

 

As ever, a very clear and concise, easy to enforce definition – not.

 

And who will help enforce it? No surprises there.

 

According to reports, Meta will “rely on‘independent fact-checking partners’to review media for fake content that slipped through the company’s new disclosure requirement.”

 

Reprinted with permission from Reclaim The Net.

 

 

Issue: August 3, 2020

 

Meme Stamp: Adobe tool to show “veracity” of memes to reduce “misinformation”

Memes, photos, and videos will be cryptographically tagged for authenticity.

 

https://reclaimthenet.org/adobe-meme-stamp

Anonymous ID: 4ba691 Nov. 13, 2023, 5:57 a.m. No.19908497   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8536

>>19908445

> signed up to the group(C2PA) that spawned Content Credentials,

kek

maybe one of the reasons they lost their shit when Musk took over twitter??

Check the archive for this page and read the first line

 

>The Content Authenticity Initiative (CAI) was announced by Adobe in 2019. We are now a group of hundreds of creators, technologists, journalists, activists, and leaders who seek to address misinformation and content authenticity at scale.

 

Our members

We are focused on cross-industry participation, with an open, extensible approach for providing media transparency to allow for better evaluation of content.

 

The Content Authenticity Initiative (CAI) was announced by Adobe in 2019__ in partnership with Twitter__ and the New York Times. We are now a group of hundreds of creators, technologists, journalists, activists, and leaders who seek to address misinformation and content authenticity at scale. We are focused on cross-industry participation, with an open, extensible approach for providing media transparency that allows for better evaluation of content provenance. This group collaborates with a wide set of representatives from software, publishing, and social media companies, human rights organizations, photojournalism, and academic researchers to develop content attribution standards and tools.

 

In February 2021, Adobe, Arm, BBC, Intel, Microsoft, and Truepic launched a formal coalition for standards development: The Coalition for Content Provenance and Authenticity (C2PA). It is a mutually governed consortium created to accelerate the pursuit of pragmatic, adoptable standards for digital provenance, serving creators, editors, publishers, media platforms, and consumers.

 

As standards specification work is taken up by the C2PA, the CAI continues its mission to foster a broad and diverse community of stakeholders through three areas of focus: education and advocacy, prototype implementations in real-world contexts at scale, and developing an engaged community of implementors and users of this technology.

 

Join us in this work and stay up-to-date with our efforts by filling out the CAI membership form.

 

 

https://web.archive.org/web/20211201135745/https://contentauthenticity.org/our-members

Anonymous ID: 4ba691 Nov. 13, 2023, 6:04 a.m. No.19908536   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>19908497

 

> https://contentcredentials.org/

 

Wait, where did this image come from?

 

Deepfakes. Voice cloning. Synthetic media. It’s hard to tell what’s accurate and authentic these days.

Content Credentials reveal helpful information that's usually hidden

 

Critical information about the content you see online is often inaccessible or inaccurate. Content Credentials are a new open technology for revealing answers to your questions about content with a simple click: How was it made? Is it AI-generated? When was it created or edited?