91视频

Walter Scheirer

Computer Science and Engineering

Phone
574-631-2436
Email
walter.scheirer@nd.edu

Assistant Professor

  • Image forensics
  • Computer vision
  • Machine learning
  • Biometrics

Video

Scheirer’s 91视频

Scheirer in the News

Another potential challenge the cardinals face when posting on social media is a slew of negative comments, according to Walter Scheirer, professor of engineering who researches internet culture at the University of Notre Dame.

Video

"The algorithm that we typically call deep fakes came out in 2017 and it was released publicly to the internet specifically to create pornographic videos," said Walter Scheirer a professor at Notre Dame. Scheirer has been involved in media forensics for years. He said the prevalence of these crimes has grown.

Tech Story

Walter Scheirer, an engineering professor at the University of Notre Dame, identified the image as a product of a generative AI algorithm. 

Walter Scheirer, an engineering professor at the University of Notre Dame, told USA TODAY the image is likely "the product of a generative AI algorithm."

Audio

On today's episode, we travel the internet from UFOs, through 9/11, to COVID, to trace how we ended up in a world that can't be believed. Guests include: Walter Scheirer, Dennis O'Dowdy Collegiate Professor of Engineering at the University of Notre Dame, and author of A History of Fake Things On The Internet.

Walter Scheirer, an engineering professor at the University of Notre Dame whose area of research includes visual recognition, said the Instagram video appeared to be a "very obvious face swap using a deepfake-like algorithm."

Walter Scheirer, a professor at the University of Notre Dame who specializes in visual disinformation, told USA TODAY the visual errors are consistent with those seen in AI-generated images. He also noted the lack of legitimate sourcing for the image.

The Progressive

Walter Scheirer, Professor of engineering at the University of Notre Dame, author of A History of Fake Things on the Internet: In this age of the Internet, older communications media still exist, and they tend to be more trustworthy sources of information when compared to social media.

Walter Scheirer, a professor of engineering at the University of Notre Dame, told USA TODAY the hands and unnaturally-rendered fingers of those in the image are clear indications the picture was most likely AI-generated.

Wisconsin Public Radio

The internet is indeed overflowing with fake content, says computer scientist Walter Scheirer. 

The original also contains several hallmarks of AI-generated images that are less prominent in the more recent version, Walter Scheirer, an associate professor of computer science and engineering at the University of Notre Dame, told USA TODAY in an email.

Author Walter Scheirer discusses his new book about how advances in technology brought us to the point where faked texts, images, and video content are nearly indistinguishable from what is authentic or true.

Walter Scheirer, a Notre Dame Associate Professor and author of "A History of Fake Things on the Internet," says AI and human creativity is not mutually exclusive.

Nautilus

And yet, when Walter Scheirer, a computer scientist and media forensics expert at the University of Notre Dame, sent his students to scour the internet for examples of AI-doctored videos, what they brought back surprised him. It was, he says, “memes all the way down.”

IEEE Spectrum

University of Notre Dame computer science professor WalterJ. Scheirer has come at this core problem of online speech, including images, from an unconventional direction. 

 In “A History of Fake Things on the Internet,” computer scientist Walter J. Scheirer proposes that much of what has been disparaged as “misinformation” is best considered under a different rubric: that of art.

The computer scientist Walter J. Scheirer has worked in media forensics for years. He understands more than most how these new technologies could set off a society-wide epistemic meltdown, yet he sees no signs that they are doing so. Doctored videos online delight, taunt, jolt, menace, arouse, and amuse, but they rarely deceive. As Scheirer argues in his new book, “A History of Fake Things on the Internet” (Stanford), the situation just isn’t as bad as it looks.

Salon

"It seems to me that the big internet companies are very reluctant to even talk about this because it threatens their core business," said Walter Scheirer, a computer scientist at the University of Notre Dame.