You've almost certainly been seeing stories on the internet this
year about the growing trend of Deep Fakes.
They are videos that are
expertly engineered to give the appearance of some prominent figure or another
saying something that he or she never actually said.
It's a clever, computer
generated ruse.
The reason it's been making
headlines is that Deep Fakes tend to be really good, which makes them
notoriously difficult to spot. Their recent appearance, unfortunately, is
negatively impacting the national dialogue on important issues. After
all, when you're looking at what appears to be evidence of a prominent figure
saying something shocking, of course you're going to be inclined to believe
your own eyes.
Naturally, it did not take the
hackers of the world long to figure out a way to use this relatively new
technology to their benefit. Recently, a UK energy company's CEO was
tricked into wiring more than $220,000 USD to a Hungarian supplier. He
believed that he had received verbal instructions from his boss to do exactly
that, and merely complied with the order.
The only problem? His
boss issued no such order. It actually came from a hacker using deep fake
software to precisely mimic the voice of the executive demanding that his
underling pays the supplier within the hour.
A spokesman for the company's
insurance firm had this to say about the matter:
"The software was able to
imitate the voice, and not only the voice: the tonality, the punctuation,
the German accent."
Energy company employees caught
onto the ruse when the hacker made a similar demand a short time later that
same day. The second time though, the energy firm CEO called his boss
personally, only to discover that he was simultaneously dealing with his fake
boss and the real one.
There's no way to know how many
times this has happened before, or how frequently it's happening now. Even
worse, our ability to create deep fakes presently far outstrips our ability to
detect them. That should give business owners
everywhere pause.
Protect your business from
online threats such as deep fakes. Let SpartanTec, Inc. in Fayetteville set up
security measures that will protect your company from such malicious software.
SpartanTec, Inc.
517 Owen Dr
Fayetteville, NC 28304
(910) 745-7776
http://manageditservicesfayetteville.com
Cities Served:
Fayetteville, Spring Lake, Hope Mills, Dunn, Aberdeen, Southern Pines, Pinehurst, Sanford, Clinto
517 Owen Dr
Fayetteville, NC 28304
(910) 745-7776
http://manageditservicesfayetteville.com
Cities Served:
Fayetteville, Spring Lake, Hope Mills, Dunn, Aberdeen, Southern Pines, Pinehurst, Sanford, Clinto
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