Google
is
planning
to
roll
out
a
technology
that
will
identify
whether
a
photo
was
taken
with
a
camera,
edited
by
software
like
Photoshop,
or
produced
by
generative
AI
models.
In
the
coming
months,
Google’s
search
results
will
include
an
updated
“about
this
image
feature”
to
let
people
know
if
an
image
was
created
or
edited
with
AI
tools.
The
system
Google
is
using
is
part
of
the
Coalition
for
Content
Provenance
and
Authenticity
(C2PA),
one
of
the
largest
groups
trying
to
address
AI-generated
imagery.
C2PA’s
authentication
is
a
technical
standard
that
includes
information
about
where
images
originate
and
works
across
both
hardware
and
software
to
create
a
digital
trail.
Amazon,
Microsoft,
Adobe,
Arm,
OpenAI,
Intel,
Truepic,
and
Google
have
all
backed
C2PA
authentication,
but
adoption
has
been
slow.
Google’s
integration
into
search
results
will
be
a
first
big
test
for
the
initiative.
Google
has
helped
develop
the
latest
C2PA
technical
standard
(version
2.1)
and
will
use
it
alongside
a
forthcoming
C2PA
trust
list,
which
allows
platforms
like
Google
Search
to
confirm
the
origin
of
content.
“For
example,
if
the
data
shows
an
image
was
taken
by
a
specific
camera
model,
the
trust
list
helps
validate
that
this
piece
of
information
is
accurate,”
says
Laurie
Richardson,
vice
president
of
trust
and
safety
at
Google.
Google
also
plans
to
integrate
C2PA
metadata
into
its
ad
systems.
“Our
goal
is
to
ramp
this
up
over
time
and
use
C2PA
signals
to
inform
how
we
enforce
key
policies,”
says
Richardson.
“We’re
also
exploring
ways
to
relay
C2PA
information
to
viewers
on
YouTube
when
content
is
captured
with
a
camera,
and
we’ll
have
more
updates
on
that
later
in
the
year.”
While
Google
stands
out
as
one
of
the
first
big
tech
companies
to
adopt
C2PA’s
authentication
standard,
there
are
plenty
of
adoption
and
interoperability
challenges
ahead
to
get
this
working
across
a
broad
variety
of
hardware
and
software.
Only
a
handful
of
cameras
from
Leica
and
Sony
support
the
C2PA’s
open
technical
standard,
which
adds
camera
settings
metadata
as
well
as
the
data
and
location
of
where
an
image
was
taken
to
photographs.
Nikon
and
Canon
have
both
pledged
to
adopt
the
C2PA
standard,
and
we’re
still
waiting
to
hear
whether
Apple
and
Google
will
implement
C2PA
support
into
iPhones
and
Android
devices.
Adobe’s
Photoshop
and
Lightroom
apps
can
add
C2PA
data,
but
Affinity
Photo,
Gimp,
and
many
others
don’t.
There
are
also
challenges
around
how
to
view
the
data
once
it’s
added
to
a
photo,
with
most
big
online
platforms
not
offering
labels.
Google’s
adoption
in
search
results
may
encourage
others
to
roll
out
similar
labels,
though.
“Establishing
and
signaling
content
provenance
remains
a
complex
challenge,
with
a
range
of
considerations
based
on
the
product
or
service,”
admits
Richardson.
“And
while
we
know
there’s
no
silver
bullet
solution
for
all
content
online,
working
with
others
in
the
industry
is
critical
to
create
sustainable
and
interoperable
solutions.”
(Originally posted by Tom Warren)
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