YouTube has a new label that indicates whether an uploaded video was actually filmed on camera without any editing of the footage or audio. You can see the “Caught on Camera” tag thanks to the digital authentication service for materials Trupic – he posted one of these videos on his channel.
YouTube determines the authenticity of uploaded videos using the C2PA tagging standard – videos created using recording devices and equipment that support metadata will be tagged. The presence of the tag “means that the creator has used some technology to verify the origin of his video and confirm that the audio and visuals have not been altered,” the reference section states.
For the label to appear, you must use tools that support C2PA 2.1 and higher, which means that it will not be added often at first. Camera makers, including Leica, began adding relevant metadata to videos last year, but it’s not yet clear what content is actually supported by YouTube’s authentication system. The goal of the initiative is to ensure transparency regarding materials generated by artificial intelligence on the platform, Google told The Verge. An edited video can also be authenticated, but three conditions must be met.
Previously, the YouTube administration obliged platform users to independently label AI-generated realistic content.
Chilean astronomers have captured a close-up photo of the giant dying star WOH G64 outside…
At the SC24 high-performance computing conference in Atlanta, Maxwell Labs, a pioneer in solid-state photonic…
On the eve of the very soon premiere, Polish science fiction writer Andrzej Sapkowski shared…
The National Center for Consumer Affairs of Japan invited citizens of the country to take…
Incidents with unexpected Windows updates followed by the computer rebooting without warning may soon become…
Arm has published the PC Base System Architecture (PC-BSA) specification to set the standard for…