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Project

Roskomnadzor creates a system for checking videos for lies and searching for deepfakes

Customers: Main Radio Frequency Center, FSUE GRCC

Moscow; Telecommunications and Communications



Project date: 2022/10

In early November 2022, it became known about the creation of the Expert service, which will allow checking video recordings of performances for lies and manipulations. This technology is being developed by specialists from the ITMO National Center for Cognitive Development for the Main Radio Frequency Center (GRCC) subordinate to Roskomnadzor.

According to Kommersant, the Expert system analyzes video or audio - it evaluates confidence, the level of aggression of internal and external, congruence (the level of consistency of information transmitted in a verbal and non-verbal way) and inconsistency, compares words with scientific articles and statements of other specialists. According to the developers, the system is "sharpened to work with the English language," but will be able to extract indicators of confidence, aggressiveness and congruence in any language.

Roskomnadzor creates a video verification system

Oleg Basov, head of the Cognitive Non-Verbal Research Laboratory of the NCCR ITMO, said in early November 2022 that the service had been tested ahead of the elections to the US Senate. He also said that in the near future there is an adaptation of the service for the Russian language.

By the beginning of November 2022, more than 90% of Russian developments related to AI were built on the basis of downloaded open foreign libraries along with data sets for their training, explains the top manager of the profile IT company:

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Therefore, the development of ITMO is adapted for the English language. Retraining for Russian will require a large amount of data and costs.
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Similar developments were carried out in the West: in 2017, in the United States, the University of Maryland and Dartmouth College created a neural network that recognizes lies, which was trained in video recordings of trials. The American Innocence Project was also engaged in the recognition of lies in court through AI, using Amazon Mechanical Turk for analysis.[1]

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