organization:defense advanced research projects agency

  • In the Age of A.I., Is Seeing Still Believing ? | The New Yorker
    https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2018/11/12/in-the-age-of-ai-is-seeing-still-believing

    In a media environment saturated with fake news, such technology has disturbing implications. Last fall, an anonymous Redditor with the username Deepfakes released a software tool kit that allows anyone to make synthetic videos in which a neural network substitutes one person’s face for another’s, while keeping their expressions consistent. Along with the kit, the user posted pornographic videos, now known as “deepfakes,” that appear to feature various Hollywood actresses. (The software is complex but comprehensible: “Let’s say for example we’re perving on some innocent girl named Jessica,” one tutorial reads. “The folders you create would be: ‘jessica; jessica_faces; porn; porn_faces; model; output.’ ”) Around the same time, “Synthesizing Obama,” a paper published by a research group at the University of Washington, showed that a neural network could create believable videos in which the former President appeared to be saying words that were really spoken by someone else. In a video voiced by Jordan Peele, Obama seems to say that “President Trump is a total and complete dipshit,” and warns that “how we move forward in the age of information” will determine “whether we become some kind of fucked-up dystopia.”

    “People have been doing synthesis for a long time, with different tools,” he said. He rattled off various milestones in the history of image manipulation: the transposition, in a famous photograph from the eighteen-sixties, of Abraham Lincoln’s head onto the body of the slavery advocate John C. Calhoun; the mass alteration of photographs in Stalin’s Russia, designed to purge his enemies from the history books; the convenient realignment of the pyramids on the cover of National Geographic, in 1982; the composite photograph of John Kerry and Jane Fonda standing together at an anti-Vietnam demonstration, which incensed many voters after the Times credulously reprinted it, in 2004, above a story about Kerry’s antiwar activities.

    “In the past, anybody could buy Photoshop. But to really use it well you had to be highly skilled,” Farid said. “Now the technology is democratizing.” It used to be safe to assume that ordinary people were incapable of complex image manipulations. Farid recalled a case—a bitter divorce—in which a wife had presented the court with a video of her husband at a café table, his hand reaching out to caress another woman’s. The husband insisted it was fake. “I noticed that there was a reflection of his hand in the surface of the table,” Farid said, “and getting the geometry exactly right would’ve been really hard.” Now convincing synthetic images and videos were becoming easier to make.

    The acceleration of home computing has converged with another trend: the mass uploading of photographs and videos to the Web. Later, when I sat down with Efros in his office, he explained that, even in the early two-thousands, computer graphics had been “data-starved”: although 3-D modellers were capable of creating photorealistic scenes, their cities, interiors, and mountainscapes felt empty and lifeless. True realism, Efros said, requires “data, data, data” about “the gunk, the dirt, the complexity of the world,” which is best gathered by accident, through the recording of ordinary life.

    Today, researchers have access to systems like ImageNet, a site run by computer scientists at Stanford and Princeton which brings together fourteen million photographs of ordinary places and objects, most of them casual snapshots posted to Flickr, eBay, and other Web sites. Initially, these images were sorted into categories (carrousels, subwoofers, paper clips, parking meters, chests of drawers) by tens of thousands of workers hired through Amazon Mechanical Turk. Then, in 2012, researchers at the University of Toronto succeeded in building neural networks capable of categorizing ImageNet’s images automatically; their dramatic success helped set off today’s neural-networking boom. In recent years, YouTube has become an unofficial ImageNet for video. Efros’s lab has overcome the site’s “platform bias”—its preference for cats and pop stars—by developing a neural network that mines, from “life style” videos such as “My Spring Morning Routine” and “My Rustic, Cozy Living Room,” clips of people opening packages, peering into fridges, drying off with towels, brushing their teeth. This vast archive of the uninteresting has made a new level of synthetic realism possible.

    In 2016, the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) launched a program in Media Forensics, or MediFor, focussed on the threat that synthetic media poses to national security. Matt Turek, the program’s manager, ticked off possible manipulations when we spoke: “Objects that are cut and pasted into images. The removal of objects from a scene. Faces that might be swapped. Audio that is inconsistent with the video. Images that appear to be taken at a certain time and place but weren’t.” He went on, “What I think we’ll see, in a couple of years, is the synthesis of events that didn’t happen. Multiple images and videos taken from different perspectives will be constructed in such a way that they look like they come from different cameras. It could be something nation-state driven, trying to sway political or military action. It could come from a small, low-resource group. Potentially, it could come from an individual.”

    As with today’s text-based fake news, the problem is double-edged. Having been deceived by a fake video, one begins to wonder whether many real videos are fake. Eventually, skepticism becomes a strategy in itself. In 2016, when the “Access Hollywood” tape surfaced, Donald Trump acknowledged its accuracy while dismissing his statements as “locker-room talk.” Now Trump suggests to associates that “we don’t think that was my voice.”

    “The larger danger is plausible deniability,” Farid told me. It’s here that the comparison with counterfeiting breaks down. No cashier opens up the register hoping to find counterfeit bills. In politics, however, it’s often in our interest not to believe what we are seeing.

    As alarming as synthetic media may be, it may be more alarming that we arrived at our current crises of misinformation—Russian election hacking; genocidal propaganda in Myanmar; instant-message-driven mob violence in India—without it. Social media was enough to do the job, by turning ordinary people into media manipulators who will say (or share) anything to win an argument. The main effect of synthetic media may be to close off an escape route from the social-media bubble. In 2014, video of the deaths of Michael Brown and Eric Garner helped start the Black Lives Matter movement; footage of the football player Ray Rice assaulting his fiancée catalyzed a reckoning with domestic violence in the National Football League. It seemed as though video evidence, by turning us all into eyewitnesses, might provide a path out of polarization and toward reality. With the advent of synthetic media, all that changes. Body cameras may still capture what really happened, but the aesthetic of the body camera—its claim to authenticity—is also a vector for misinformation. “Eyewitness video” becomes an oxymoron. The path toward reality begins to wash away.

    #Fake_news #Image #Synthèse

  • The Pentagon Wants to Buy That Bomb You’re Building in the Garage - Defense One (via @stephane)
    http://www.defenseone.com/technology/2016/03/darpa-IED-bomb-tinkerers/126649

    On Friday, the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, or #DARPA, announced that they would award money to people who can turn consumer electronics, household chemicals, 3-D printed parts, cheap drones or other “commercially available technology” into the next improvised weapon [un programme en trois phases].

    (…) “Proposers are free to reconfigure, repurpose, program, reprogram, modify, combine, or recombine commercially available technology in any way within the bounds of local, state, and federal laws and regulations. Use of components, products, and systems from non-military technical specialties (e.g., transportation, construction, maritime, and communications) is of particular interest”

    #silicon_army

  • Le Deep Web démantèle les réseaux de trafics d’êtres humains - L’Agence américaine DARPA a lancé Memex pour les détecter | Le Meilleur des mondes
    http://meilleurdesmondes.be/blog/?p=1726

    Le trafic des êtres humains est devenu plus que jamais un secteur utilisé par le crime organisé mondial ; il attise même la convoitise des réseaux jihadistes qui en a compris tout son intérêt. Mais ce fléau nécessite une analyse complexe, qui demande de regrouper beaucoup d’informations qu’il faut ensuite filtrer, classer et lier pour avoir, au final, un schéma cohérent d’un réseau. Détecter ce trafic sur le Web reste donc un challenge comme pour tant d’autres activités illicites.

    L’agence de l’armée américaine Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) l’a bien compris. Cet organe officiel, à l’origine d’Internet, a créé une nouvelle arme : Memex. Il s’agit d’un moteur de recherche qui permet d’inspecter des éléments dans la partie invisible d’Internet. (...) Memex engage la recherche à l’envers en se focalisant sur les arcanes du « deep web » c-à-d les pages non indexées par les moteurs de recherche traditionnels.

    D’après l’Agence, plus de 60 millions de ces pages criminelles ont été publiées durant les deux dernières années. Mais vu leur courte durée de vie, elles n’apparaissent pas sur Google (...)

    #surveillance #trafic #DARPA #traite #hmmmm

  • Scientists Consider Repurposing Robots for Ebola - NYTimes.com
    http://www.nytimes.com/2014/10/23/science/scientists-consider-repurposing-robots-for-ebola.html

    “As was the case in Fukushima, the Ebola crisis in Africa has revealed a significant gap between robot capabilities and what is needed in the realm of disaster relief and humanitarian assistance,” said Gill A. Pratt, a roboticist who is a program manager at the federal Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency. “We have a moral obligation to try and select, adapt and apply available technology where it can help, but we must also appreciate the difficulty of the problem.”

    Many of the countries experiencing the worst of the Ebola epidemic are in no position to deploy robots. But rudimentary models are widely used in medical settings in the United States, and already nervous hospital administrators are reaching out to manufacturers.

    #robots #santé

  • Will This Software Make Pilots Obsolete?
    https://medium.com/war-is-boring/1c0dbe0b9875

    The Aircrew Labor In-Cockpit Automation System project is the brainchild of the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, the Pentagon’s advanced technology organization.

    DARPA describes ALIAS as a “tailorable, drop-in, removable kit that would enable the addition of high levels of automation into existing aircraft to enable operation with reduced on-board crew.”

    ALIAS would “execute a planned mission from takeoff to landing, even in the face of contingency events such as aircraft system failures.”

    (...)

    The third factor is probably the most important. ALIAS should have a human-machine interface that will enable the “human operator” to concentrate on high-level mission planning during the flight rather than the routine aspects of flying.

    DARPA plans to start with a ground-based system, demonstrate a prototype on one aircraft model, and then port it to another aircraft to prove ALIAS’s flexibility.

    Given decades of relentlessly increasing cockpit automation, and that your Amazon package might be delivered by drone someday, a project such as ALIAS was inevitable.

    But it’s hard not to remember the famous line from Westworld, the movie in which androids in a theme park go berserk and kill their masters.

    Nothing can go wrong.

  • U.S. Officials Opening Up on #Cyberwarfare - NYTimes.com
    http://www.nytimes.com/2012/09/27/us/us-officials-opening-up-on-cyberwarfare.html?pagewanted=all

    Next month the Pentagon’s research arm will host contractors who want to propose “revolutionary technologies for understanding, planning and managing cyberwarfare.” It is an ambitious program that the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, or Darpa, calls Plan X, and the public description talks about “understanding the cyber battlespace,” quantifying “battle damage” and working in Darpa’s “cyberwar laboratory.”

    James A. Lewis, who studies cybersecurity at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington, says he sees the Plan X public announcement as “a turning point” in a long debate over secrecy about cyberwarfare. He said it was timely, given that public documents suggest that at least 12 of the world’s 15 largest militaries are building cyberwarfare programs.

    “I see Plan X as operationalizing and routinizing cyberattack capabilities,” Mr. Lewis said. “If we talk openly about offensive nuclear capabilities and every other kind, why not cyber?”

    la #cyberguerre devient de plus en plus officiellement offensive
    #etats-unis

    Cyberwarfare was discussed quite openly in the 1990s, though technological capabilities and targets were far more limited than they are today, said Jason Healey, who heads the Cyber Statecraft Initiative at the Atlantic Council in Washington.

    “Our current silence dates back 8 or 10 years, and N.S.A. is a big reason,” said Mr. Healey, who is working on a history of cyberwarfare.

    (...)

    et il faut bosser le #storytelling :

    Because both the Bush and Obama administrations were slow to speak publicly about their use of armed #drones, Mr. Waxman said, “they ceded a lot of ground to critics to shape the narrative and portray U.S. practices as lawless.” As a result, he said, “the U.S. is trying to play catch-up, giving speech after speech, saying ‘We abide by the law.’ ”

    Now, Mr. Waxman said, because the United States “occupies a position of advantage on offensive cyber capabilities, it should seize the opportunity to lay out a set of rules for itself and others.”

  • Exclusive: Darpa Director Bolts Pentagon for Google | Danger Room | Wired.com
    http://www.wired.com/dangerroom/2012/03/dugan-darpa-google

    Darpa director Regina Dugan will soon be stepping down from her position atop the Pentagon’s premiere research shop to take a job with Google. Dugan, whose controversial tenure at the agency lasted just under three years, was “offered and accepted at senior executive position” with the internet giant, according to Darpa spokesman Eric Mazzacone. She felt she couldn’t say no to such an “innovative company,” he adds.

    via @bodyspacesoc #normal

    • The Pentagon’s Office of Inspector General (OIG) is also actively investigating hundreds of thousands of dollars’ worth of contracts that Darpa gave out to RedX Defense — a bomb-detection firm that Dugan co-founded, and still partially owns.The Pentagon’s Office of Inspector General (OIG) is also actively investigating hundreds of thousands of dollars’ worth of contracts that Darpa gave out to RedX Defense — a bomb-detection firm that Dugan co-founded, and still partially owns.

      Ceci, poursuit l’article, n’a bien sûr rien à voir avec sa mutation.

    • Tiens, Regina Dugan est arrivée chez Facebook !

      Post de Mark Z. du 13 avril 2016
      https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=10102777875412201

      I’m excited to announce that we’ve started a new group at Facebook called Building 8 focused on building new hardware products to advance our mission of connecting the world.
      This team will be led by Regina Dugan, who most recently led the Advanced Technology and Projects group at Google, and before that was the Director of DARPA (Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency - DARPA).

      I’m excited to have Regina apply DARPA-style breakthrough development at the intersection of science and products to our mission. This method is characterized by aggressive, fixed timelines, extensive use of partnerships with universities, small and large businesses, and clear objectives for shipping products at scale.

      We’ll be investing hundreds of people and hundreds of millions of dollars into this effort over the next few years. I’m excited to see breakthroughs on our 10 year roadmap in augmented and virtual reality, artificial intelligence, connectivity and other important areas.

      Welcome to Facebook, Regina!

      #silicon_army

  • Pentagon Set To Track Social Media - SocialTimes.com
    http://socialtimes.com/pentagon-set-to-track-social-media_b71162

    Doubt the power of social media? The Pentagon doesn’t. A new project from the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency focuses on social media tracking.

    It seems like DARPA would have more important things to do than track tweets, but a new project, titled the Social Media in Strategic Communication, suggests that DARPA may spend up to $42 million on a project designed to track social media. DARPA explains: “Changes to the nature of conflict resulting from the use of social media are likely to be as profound as those resulting from previous communications revolutions. The effective use of social media has the potential to help the Armed Forces better understand the environment in which it operates and to allow more agile use of information in support of operations.”

    What will the project include? Lots of things apparently. DARPA identifies four major goals:

    “1. Detect, classify, measure and track the (a) formation, development and spread of ideas

    and concepts (memes), and (b) purposeful or deceptive messaging and misinformation.

    2. Recognize persuasion campaign structures and influence operations across social media

    sites and communities.

    3. Identify participants and intent, and measure effects of persuasion campaigns.

    4. Counter messaging of detected adversary influence operations.”

    In other words, what happened in Egypt was enough to spook the American government. In early 2011, Egypt experienced a revolution which resulted in bringing down President Hosni Mubarak’s government. Social media – Twitter in particular – has been credited with playing a major role in Egypt’s revolution.

    In many ways, the initiative is surprising – not because it exists but because it has taken the government so long to launch the project. None the less, there is perhaps no greater signal that a communication medium is legitimate than government recognition. Welcome to table Twitter; the US Department of Defense considers you equally as dangerous, if not more so, than a television or newspaper.

    #réseauxsociaux

    A écouter : Un candidat républicain US soupçonné d’usage de faux followers ?

    http://medias.rsr.ch/actu-en-audio/actu/2011/actu-audio-20110803-7662.mp3