Skip to main content

Facebook will spend $10 million and offer a cash prize to detect deepfakes

Facebook will offer a cash prize to the person or group that can build a next-generation way to detect deepfakes — and it’s even creating its own original deepfakes for participants to work with.

Recommended Videos

The Deepfake Detection Challenge is a partnership between Facebook, Microsoft, the Partnership on AI, and academics. Facebook has put up $10 million towards the partnership to help detect and deal with videos and other media that have been manipulated to show someone doing or saying something they never said or did.

Please enable Javascript to view this content

“The goal of the challenge is to produce technology that everyone can use to better detect when AI has been used to alter a video in order to mislead the viewer,” wrote Mike Schroepfer, the Chief Technology Officer of Facebook AI, in a blog post announcing the program.

The challenge will use a brand new set of videos that feature paid actors, so no Facebook user data will be part of the program. The company will create both unmodified and “tampered” videos using different deepfake AI techniques for participants to detect. The hope is to develop a way to better detect and prevent tampered media — and give social network like Facebook a way to flag deepfakes before they go viral.

To encourage participation, there will be research collaborations and prizes as part of the challenge. Facebook has already dedicated $10 million is being dedicated to the project.

“[The] $10 million total is being given across university grants, challenge awards, workshops, and starting to build the dataset. We will continue to invest to further the development of the dataset over time and support the research community,” a Facebook spokesperson told Digital Trends.

The Deepfake Detection Challenge will begin in October and run through May 2020 globally.

Deepfakes are a relatively new technology that has grown rapidly this year. There’s already been issues with fake deepfakes purporting to show famous people saying something they never actually said, including one deepfake of Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg proclaiming his power over “millions of people’s stolen data.” Experts say that the technology is advancing quickly and deepfakes will only get more convincing (and easier to create) over the next few years.

Experts say that to fight the perpetuation of deepfakes being used in the wrong way, programs like the Deepfake Detection Challenge are essential. 

“Technology to manipulate images is advancing faster than our ability to tell what’s real from what’s been faked. A problem as big as this won’t be solved by one person alone,” said Phillip Isola, Assistant Professor of Electrical Engineering & Computer Science at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, in the announcement. “Open competitions like this one spur innovation by focusing the world’s collective brainpower on a seemingly impossible goal.”

Allison Matyus
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Allison Matyus is a general news reporter at Digital Trends. She covers any and all tech news, including issues around social…
Facebook buys popular GIF platform Giphy for $400 million
Facebook buys Giphy

Facebook has purchased the GIF platform Giphy for a reported $400 million.

Facebook announced that Giphy's library of content will soon be further integrated into Instagram and the company's other apps.

Read more
Facebook will reportedly pay $52 million to employees who suffered PTSD
facebook home gallery 1

Facebook has reportedly agreed to pay its content moderator employees $52 million as part of a settlement over a lawsuit filed by workers who suffered mental health issues as a result of their jobs. 

The social media giant will pay a minimum of $1,000 to 11,250 content moderators who developed issues such as post-traumatic stress disorder because of the stressful job of moderating graphic and disturbing content on Facebook, according to The Verge. 

Read more
Tech firms donate 10 million face masks stockpiled after California wildfires
man checking phone with mask on

Apple and Facebook have been stockpiling millions of face masks for months -- just not for the coronavirus, officially known as COVID-19. referred to as coronavirus.

The tech giants announced this week that they were donating a combined 9.7 million masks to help fight the deadly pandemic, medical equipment originally stored following a different disaster: last years's California wildfires.

Read more