[HN Gopher] Young female Japanese biker is 50-year-old man using...
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Young female Japanese biker is 50-year-old man using FaceApp
 
Author : amrrs
Score  : 628 points
Date   : 2021-03-19 14:01 UTC (8 hours ago)
 
web link (mothership.sg)
w3m dump (mothership.sg)
 
| renewiltord wrote:
| Makes sense. It's a performance. I don't get upset that Sir
| Patrick Stewart can't actually telepathically communicate with
| all of Earth.
 
| [deleted]
 
| dukeofdoom wrote:
| Isn't there already controversy if this is being currently used
| in the Biden administration. The guy hasn't been seen with
| reporters. The last time he answered questions the microphone
| seemingly passed through his hand. And there's also a video of
| his election victory in front of a parking lot of staged cars.
| With a screen playing his address, while the podium is empty.
| He's getting the nickname C.G.I Joe.
 
| wly_cdgr wrote:
| :shrug:...would still hit
 
| njharman wrote:
| Almost to the point were this is not newsworthy. As in its so
| common, expected, and not novel. Like it's not a major story when
| someone is found driving without insurance.
 
| Sunspark wrote:
| The real singularity will be when one can have realtime deepfake
| video of themselves making trap porn.
 
  | Pfhreak wrote:
  | FYI, you've used a slur -- Tr*p is a slur for transgender folks
  | often used in association with porn. You may want to either
  | clarify your meaning (in case you are using the word in a
  | different meaning) or choose a different word.
 
    | Sunspark wrote:
    | I am specifically referencing it in the porn fetish context
    | which is accurate, especially when identifying the logical
    | evolution of faceapp.
    | 
    | I would not use this word in any other context, and in fact,
    | cannot use another word in the porn fetish context because
    | there are no non-offensive words to describe the fetish which
    | I am aware of at the current time. Apologies to anyone who
    | may have felt offended, this was not my wish and there is a
    | very clear difference between a person and a fetish.
 
| rodolphoarruda wrote:
| My wife owns a wedding dress shop. She uses up to 25% of her time
| to produce content for social media.
| 
| One day she decided to mix/merge her face with Jennifer Aniston's
| and that was a game changer for the business in terms of audience
| engagement.
 
  | JacobSuperslav wrote:
  | what app did you use to change it?
 
| colordrops wrote:
| Have you all been following the green screened Biden interview?
| Watch the light grey mic - Biden's hand can't decide if it wants
| to be in front or behind the mic. Something weird is going on:
| 
| https://twitter.com/i/events/1372500525346820099
| 
| An army of "fact checkers" has been dispatched for damage
| control.
 
| henearkr wrote:
| Did he want to make the promotion of bikes and biking at any
| cost?
| 
| I have to testify that in Japan there is a wave of fashion and TV
| celebrities affecting a public discourse of "oh no the Japanese
| industry will be soon dying because of the push for
| electrification of all vehicles!".
| 
| Also, most of the loud (and very suffocating, when they zoom past
| you) bikers near my home are either old men (like this man) or in
| some cases their children.
| 
| Was this Youtuber trying to do his best to save the youth's
| interest in motorbikes?
| 
| I would really like to see these kind of bikes fade into
| oblivion, instead of being promoted to youngsters through "deep
| fake young idols" Youtube channels.
 
| tibbydudeza wrote:
| Well there goes celebrity news sites like TMZ.
| 
| Maybe it is good thing , remember that song from a few years bacl
| "it wasn't me" is now a rather a plausible excuse.
 
| swayvil wrote:
| This guy is a Prometheus. He deserves to star in many future
| cartoons and memes.
 
| draugadrotten wrote:
| Counting 215 comments and nobody quoted Neil Stephenson yet. The
| books are worth reading, dear young ones.
| 
| "The people are pieces of software called avatars. They are the
| audiovisual bodies that people use to communicate with each other
| in the Metaverse. ...
| 
| Your avatar can look any way you want it to, up to the
| limitations of your equipment. If you're ugly, you can make your
| avatar beautiful. If you've just gotten out of bed, your avatar
| can still be wearing beautiful clothes and professionally applied
| makeup. You can look like a gorilla or a dragon or a giant
| talking penis in the Metaverse. Spend five minutes walking down
| the Street and you will see all of these."
 
| augustocallejas wrote:
| With this clear example of separation between individual and
| identity, it calls into question the need for real celebrities.
| What difference does it make if you're watching/following someone
| real/digital?
| 
| https://www.thecut.com/2018/05/lil-miquela-digital-avatar-in...
 
  | mhh__ wrote:
  | There is a streamer who has a very expensive live tracking
  | setup who actually streams entirely from inside (what is
  | basically) a game emulating a stream room. The content itself
  | isn't really my cup of tea, but the visuals are already beyond
  | the uncanny valley.
  | 
  | https://www.ginx.tv/en/twitch/who-is-code-miko-the-virtual-s...
 
  | dharmab wrote:
  | "Hololive" is another example. They're all real people, but
  | using digital appearances and personas.
 
  | scollet wrote:
  | Iirc Gorillaz and Vocaloids were massively successful
  | experiments in this domain.
  | 
  | I think some of the critique in the former was lost (i.e.
  | Weezer), but it definitely opened the gates for popular digital
  | avatars.
 
| megous wrote:
| Any guesses if FitGirl is also a 50-year old guy (or two) that's
| just very much into compression/repacking? :)
 
| cjohansson wrote:
| Interesting phenomena. I don't see any issues with it really.
| Many influencers do plastic surgery and other modifications to
| themselves to be more popular, this is a healthier alternative
 
| the-dude wrote:
| _On the internet, nobody knows you 're a dog_ [ 1993 ]
| 
| [ 1993 ]
| https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/On_the_Internet,_nobody_knows_...
 
  | balozi wrote:
  | [2021] On the internet, it doesn't matter that you are a dog
 
    | devoutsalsa wrote:
    | Thanks goodness. I was getting nervous. Have a good Friday
    | everyone, I'm feeling a little shaggy, so I'm off to the
    | groomer, er, barber.
 
    | johncessna wrote:
    | > [2021] On the internet, it doesn't matter that you are a
    | dog
    | 
    | Wishful thinking. A cursory glance at twitter or facebook
    | will show you that it very much matters what tribe you're
    | from.
 
  | cwkoss wrote:
  | Reminds me of a mousepad my dad received as am early customer
  | of Amazon.
  | 
  | "Outside of a dog, a book is man's best friend. Inside of a
  | dog, it's too dark to read."
 
| jodrellblank wrote:
| https://knowyourmeme.com/memes/there-are-no-girls-on-the-int... -
| "there are no girls on the internet" meme/trope dates back to
| Usenet 1992
| 
| [then again, why believe that 50 year old man photo is the
| person's real face or hair? Surely media photos have been
| Photoshopped since long before face-swapping apps?]
 
  | dr-smooth wrote:
  | it is damn nice hair for a 50 year old...
 
| kuu wrote:
| Likes are more important than the fact of sharing your
| experience, therefore tricks are used
 
  | yCombLinks wrote:
  | You're not sharing your experience if there's no-one to share
  | it with.
 
| cm2187 wrote:
| You will soon need a computer science degree with a major in deep
| fake detection to use online dating safely
 
| mrweasel wrote:
| Perhaps the main issue is that the guy has a point, nobody want's
| to see an uncle.
| 
| The majority of "influencers" are young women, and only a
| minority would want to follow a 50 year old uncle. I don't think
| there's much we can do about it, it's human nature. It does
| however limit the diversity and world views people are exposed to
| and sometimes it's nice to see the world through the eyes of a 50
| year Japanese biker.
 
  | _jal wrote:
  | It is such a bizarre market. I sometimes browse it for
  | sociological amusement, but it creeps me out quickly.
  | 
  | For actual enjoyment, if a video starts begging for "like
  | subscribe share" I just turn it off. I have no idea why people
  | like watching other people begging impersonally for attention.
 
    | justapassenger wrote:
    | It's just how economic of YouTube works. If you don't have
    | likes, subscribes and views, you don't make money. And if you
    | want high quality content, it costs money.
    | 
    | Lots of educational channels I watch do it, and I fully
    | understand why they do it.
 
    | creamynebula wrote:
    | Marketing teaches us that this works, they call it a CTA -
    | Call To Action, asking people to do what you want them to
    | works...
 
      | wruza wrote:
      | Youtube could simply inverse that and make their "don't
      | recommend channel" actually fucking work. Then people would
      | just unsubscribe from what is not needed periodically and
      | watch a feed full of what they actually like automagically.
      | But of course it is much easier to leave creators on their
      | own and profit from those who survive, while doing your job
      | with a left heel. Youtube doesn't deserve a penny from
      | these hardworking guys.
 
    | watwut wrote:
    | > I have no idea why people like watching other people
    | begging impersonally for attention.
    | 
    | I am aware two things:
    | 
    | 1.) If they earn money from youtube, they need likes and
    | subscriptions so that youtube algoritm shows them to more
    | people.
    | 
    | 2.) I as a programmer earn more money with less effort then
    | them. I also very likely have to deal with less bs (like
    | harassments and jerks trying to insult you or take you down
    | for lolz).
    | 
    | A combination makes me accept that these people are doing
    | entertainment as work, I consume that entertainment for free
    | and thus am absolutely fine with them trying to succeed.
    | 
    | There is also absolutely nothing wrong with entertainers
    | wanting attention. That is what pays their bills, without
    | attention they cant be successful. Attention is not dirty
    | word to me.
 
    | JSavageOne wrote:
    | I don't understand it either. If there are 2 channels with
    | otherwise comparable quality and 1 begs me for likes/subs,
    | I'll watch the other one
 
    | porcc wrote:
    | Let me recommend a solution: https://sponsor.ajay.app/
 
      | the_arun wrote:
      | Well, The UI, Logo etc., feels like my browser blocked me
      | from going to sponsor.ajay.app url - insecure, evil site. I
      | closed the browser window. But went there again to see what
      | it says.
 
      | irrational wrote:
      | Wow! This is terrific!
 
      | citruscomputing wrote:
      | Been using this for a month or so - game changer. Can skip
      | in-video advertisements, interaction reminders,
      | introductions, (configurably) via a user-submitted and
      | curated database.
 
    | thraway123412 wrote:
    | > For actual enjoyment, if a video starts begging for "like
    | subscribe share" I just turn it off.
    | 
    | I do too, but not without first hitting the dislike button. I
    | only wish others would do the same.
 
      | wruza wrote:
      | Btw, it is not clear whether a dislike drowns the content -
      | people believe it's inverse, and you're helping. Best you
      | can do to counteract is closing a tab.
 
      | throwaway53453 wrote:
      | Wow, so you're fine with hurting creators who just happen
      | to be drowning in a competitive marketplace?
      | 
      | People who don't say those words exist, but you won't find
      | them very easily. There's a reason for that.
 
        | thraway123412 wrote:
        | What do I owe them?
        | 
        | Nagging and soliciting subs and likes is fucking
        | annoying. If you want me to like a video, make a good
        | video and stop nagging.
        | 
        | If I dislike those naggers enough, maybe Google's stupid
        | artificial non-intelligence will eventually learn to
        | recommend only videos from non-naggers. I try, even
        | though I don't have much faith in Google's algorithms.
 
    | capableweb wrote:
    | > For actual enjoyment, if a video starts begging for "like
    | subscribe share" I just turn it off. I have no idea why
    | people like watching other people begging impersonally for
    | attention.
    | 
    | Same here. There are some YouTube channels I really want to
    | watch and follow as I can learn new skills from them, but the
    | constant begging and over-dramatization is a real turnoff so
    | I cannot watch it without feeling bad about it.
    | 
    | I have a similar feeling about people who takes photos of
    | themselves all the time and their social feed is filled with
    | the photos they take of themselves. I can't take a photo of
    | myself without feeling vain, and I'm getting passive-vain
    | feelings when I see friends of mine posting selfie after
    | selfie of themselves...
 
      | [deleted]
 
    | wnevets wrote:
    | >For actual enjoyment, if a video starts begging for "like
    | subscribe share" I just turn it off.
    | 
    | I used to as well but realized platforms like YouTube
    | effectively force the creators to do it.
 
    | Others wrote:
    | The issue here is that YouTube (and other platforms)
    | encourage this. It works, in that if you ask people to like
    | comment and subscribe, they like comment and subscribe more.
    | (And that boosts your standing within the system getting you
    | more impressions.)
    | 
    | Plenty of good creators do this (as it works), just to keep
    | up with their peers. It really has nothing to do with the
    | quality of the rest of their content. Don't blame the player,
    | blame the game IMO
 
      | CM30 wrote:
      | This. I run a... moderately popular by niche standards
      | channel myself, and asking for likes, subscribes, comments
      | etc gave me way more of them than I was getting before. I'm
      | not particularly interested in the monetary side of things,
      | but for getting a bit more popular on the platform... it's
      | worked well.
 
      | heavyset_go wrote:
      | There are also plenty of content creators that don't beg
      | for likes or subscriptions if that kind of thing bothers
      | you.
 
      | imglorp wrote:
      | Okay, I'll hate the game. The game has existed since the
      | first radio ad spot in 1922, the first TV ad spot in 1941,
      | and the first banner ad in 1994.
      | 
      | I would far rather pay an honest few cents for a page view
      | or a video roll than be subjected to in-content advertising
      | and begging from the creators. Certainly, creators would
      | prefer to do their thing instead of beg and scrape.
      | 
      | What can we do to accelerate micropayment tech and
      | patronage communities for creators?
 
        | Aerroon wrote:
        | YouTube quite literally has a subscription service. With
        | the service you don't see ads on videos and creators get
        | a cut based on how much you watch different content. It's
        | been around for years, but has remained rather unpopular.
        | 
        | You're not wrong though. Most creators probably hate
        | asking for stuff.
 
        | wisty wrote:
        | There's a few creators who often have a block at the end
        | who tell you that they won't ask you to like or subscribe
        | because even though it's good for the channel they hate
        | doing it and refuse to do it.
 
        | snypher wrote:
        | This seems like an anti-pattern and if they were sincere,
        | wouldn't mention it at all.
 
        | pessimizer wrote:
        | > What can we do to accelerate micropayment tech and
        | patronage communities for creators?
        | 
        | Make them nonprofit foundations democratically run rather
        | than middlemen biding their time until they can increase
        | their margins or sell to a megacorp.
 
        | datavirtue wrote:
        | What can we do? Deregulate the payments industry. Ain't
        | gonna happen though. The regulators and the regulated
        | like things just the way they are.
 
        | pjc50 wrote:
        | Surprisingly, tiktok is better at this: it surfaces new
        | content to people based on factors other than existing
        | popularity.
        | 
        | > far rather pay an honest few cents for a page view or a
        | video roll
        | 
        | I don't think this holds true for most people. PPV TV has
        | always been kind of a minor thing, and eclipsed now by
        | all-you-can-stream services. The feeling of continually
        | inserting coins, or the taxi meter running, is
        | uncomfortable to many people.
 
        | mbreese wrote:
        | _> PPV TV has always been kind of a minor thing_
        | 
        | This is true, but I think fails to be a good counter-
        | example. PPV has always been expensive and focused on
        | single events. What we haven't seen is AWS style small
        | payments.
        | 
        | Imagine if instead of paying $100/mo for cable TV, we
        | could pay $0.25/hr. If you watched TV 24x7, you'd pay
        | more, but the vast majority of people would pay much
        | less.
        | 
        | The main problem with smaller amount PPV and micro
        | transactions in general is that it is hard to get the
        | billing/accounting right. But this _is_ something that
        | could vendors get right. You only pay for what you use,
        | and what you get is billed in small enough increments
        | that it makes sense for everyone involved.
        | 
        | How this could be applied to online videos, I'm not sure.
 
        | krapht wrote:
        | AWS style small payments existed at coin-operated
        | arcades. They're all dead, Jim.
        | 
        | Micropayment news services have existed (Blendle).
        | Unpopular.
        | 
        | Pay-as-you-go prepaid cell phone service is also niche.
        | So is the a-la-carte gym membership. It's not that
        | billing/accounting is difficult. It's that it plain
        | straight up makes less money. SAAS vs one-time upgrades,
        | etc.
 
        | thaumasiotes wrote:
        | > Pay-as-you-go prepaid cell phone service is also niche.
        | 
        | The reason for that is that it's much more expensive than
        | paying by the month. I wanted pay-as-you-go specifically
        | because I have nearly zero need for cell service, but
        | would prefer to be reachable even if I'm not at home.
        | 
        | But you can't get a pay-as-you-go plan with pay-as-you-go
        | pricing. T-mobile's monthly plan now is "$15" (actually
        | something like $16.60) per month. The pay-as-you-go plan
        | would cost less than that, given usage rates, except that
        | it also costs $1 for each day you use it to any degree.
        | The incredibly high minimum fee overwhelms the already
        | small advantage of not paying for service you don't use
        | -- as soon as you use _any_ service, you get charged for
        | more than a full day of _every_ service, and then you
        | have to pay a usage rate on top of that!
 
        | carlhjerpe wrote:
        | One problem is that this would deter people from
        | watching, as they would only be watching what they want
        | to see. Bad for business.
 
        | osmarks wrote:
        | It might be somewhat irrational, but I prefer the fixed-
        | cost-for-unlimited-use model, as it makes the cost of
        | looking at a new thing zero. If I have to pay per use,
        | I'll be discouraged from exploring new content I might
        | like or might not and will look at things similar to what
        | I already see.
 
        | watwut wrote:
        | You are in minority I think. Most people dont want to
        | micro pay for entertainment.
 
        | Tarsul wrote:
        | well youtube has a premium service without ads that
        | presumably brings money to the creators. One of the music
        | subscription services actually is about to change their
        | system so that the money of every subscriber actually
        | goes to the artists that THEY listen to (sorry, forgot
        | which service it was, not spotify). So, there actually is
        | movement in this direction. And with ads becoming ever
        | more obnoxious (and privacy threatening) it becomes more
        | interesting for users, too.
 
        | fshbbdssbbgdd wrote:
        | Let's imagine the video wasn't ad-supported, but instead
        | viewers had to pay some money a la carte (and YouTube
        | gets a cut of that). Creators would still want to get
        | more viewers to make more money, and YouTube would still
        | have a recommendation algorithm that used signals such as
        | likes, comments, and subscribes to decide what to
        | recommend. So I think the ad business model isn't really
        | at fault here. Or rather, it's only at fault to the
        | extent that it's the only viable business model for a
        | video service as large as YouTube.
 
        | notahacker wrote:
        | Indeed many YouTube creators already plug the opportunity
        | to pay an honest few cents dollars for their content on
        | Patreon or their private course website in exactly the
        | same way they ask for likes other interactions,
        | _especially_ if the nature of their content means they
        | don 't see [much] ad revenue.
 
        | datavirtue wrote:
        | The ad supported model made sense for newspapers and
        | magazines but it doesn't scale. Anytime you obscure the
        | price or separate the payer from the benefit you get
        | distorted and unforseen consequences. It took scaling
        | this model to facebook levels before the failure reared
        | its head and it is indeed much worse than we had ever
        | predicted.
 
        | CraneWorm wrote:
        | Why should content creators (or anyone else) have to earn
        | money to live?
 
        | imglorp wrote:
        | Ah, the Roddenberry universe. I think that will begin
        | after the cost of clean, limitless energy approaches
        | zero. At that point anyone can turn dirt into a house or
        | a hamburger so compensation becomes much less of a
        | concern.
 
        | scollet wrote:
        | Just have to avoid the preceding world war.
 
        | imwillofficial wrote:
        | For those downvoting Parents comment, in Star Trek canon,
        | a 3rd world preceded the creation of a unified planet.
 
      | flycaliguy wrote:
      | Yeah, occasionally a reputable channel will show how many
      | views are from non subscribers and it's a pretty massive
      | ratio. These creators aren't begging, they are just trying
      | to carve out an audience.
 
      | tyfon wrote:
      | It works really well actually.
      | 
      | Personally I refuse to do this and my channel on youtube
      | still grows but it is probably growing a lot slower than if
      | I had been begging.
      | 
      | Since I do it for fun and not profit I couldn't give a damn
      | though.
 
        | asddubs wrote:
        | There's this minecraft youtuber I've been following for
        | ages, who has been on youtube for like 10 years and still
        | doesn't ask for likes or subscribes (ethoslab).
        | Especially in that space the absence of it is remarkable,
        | I haven't found anyone else who does this. Occasionally
        | he does collabs and the collaborators will do it, and you
        | can really see that it does work, it makes a big
        | difference.
 
        | tyfon wrote:
        | Yep I know him.
        | 
        | He is the only one I can think of that doesn't do this
        | and it makes me personally much more inclined to watch
        | him. He also feels "uncommercial" even after 10 years I
        | think it's fantastic that he is able to keep it that way.
 
      | JSavageOne wrote:
      | Is there evidence to show that it actually works? Me I
      | instinctively want to close the window anytime a Youtuber
      | asks me to "smash that like button and hit the notification
      | bell" 5 seconds into the video. At a minimum I think less
      | of the Youtuber and am less likely to recommend them to
      | friends. Some of the fastest growing and most popular
      | channels never beg their viewers for likes/subs.
 
        | est31 wrote:
        | The average youtube user and the average hn user are two
        | very different populations. Things like ads etc don't
        | make me buy things, at least in most instances. But they
        | are effective, otherwise companies wouldn't make ad
        | campaigns. They are just not meant for me.
 
        | anigbrowl wrote:
        | I also hate this, but if people don't ask, they don't
        | get, and typically those who don't end up with far fewer
        | subscriptions. After a while they get demoralized and
        | give up.
        | 
        | While I haven't taken time to measure this out to
        | academic standards, it's extremely obvious in niche
        | interest channels - eg I'm into synthesizers, and there's
        | a whole little subsystem of review videos, technique
        | videos, not-talking demos, jam sessions etc. The more
        | heavily branded/self-promoting presenters tend to get
        | vastly more views. My favorite reviewer centers the
        | equipment under review and makes occasional appearances
        | talking to the camera, but his maximum views tends to be
        | near the average minimum for reviewers who center
        | themselves, eg always being on-screen in a box, mirror,
        | or direct-to-camera shot and always showing their face
        | and a relevant emotional reaction to the subject of the
        | video in the poster frame. I'm sure the same patterns
        | play out in many other specialist topics.
        | 
        | To some extent this may be a product of the Infamous
        | Algorithm, but it might also reflect cognitive
        | preferences of viewers in that many people prefer to have
        | information mediated by a recognizable presenter whose
        | reactions and emphases become more meaningful with
        | repeated views, while others like me find an overly-
        | expressive presenter distracts from the material under
        | discussion and gravitate towards a more
        | subdued/restrained communication style.
        | 
        | In _Understanding Media_ , Marshall McLuhan distinguishes
        | between 'hot' and 'cool' media which employ more or less
        | intensity to solicit and maintain attention. 'Hot' styles
        | with a charismatic and overtly solicitous presenter seem
        | to be more popular in general, so even people who don't
        | like that style may end up adopting it to gain viewership
        | in a competitive market. There might be a market
        | opportunity here for catering to different kinds of
        | viewers, eg a 'CoolTube' for people who strongly prefer a
        | more low-key presentation format.
        | 
        | Incidentally, I sometimes _do_ prefer hot  'in-your-face'
        | sort of media, especially on things like experimental
        | music videos or the occasional guilty pleasure of a
        | cheesy monster movie. It's just a hunch, but it seems to
        | depend on things like a rapid tempo of editing and high
        | levels of discontinuity/unpredictability rather than
        | spatial maximalism.
 
      | [deleted]
 
    | z3ncyberpunk wrote:
    | its not bizarre, its obvious and depressing that people beat
    | around the bush about it. sex sells, a tale as old as time.
    | im sick of people feigning ignorance to topics like this like
    | some ditzy 50s era housewives trying to play suburban
    | politics
 
    | fl0wenol wrote:
    | For me it's when they do that faux: "hey guys, I was looking
    | at my metrics and % of you who viewed
    | the last X videos aren't subscribed, so it would be really
    | great if you hit that bell"
    | 
    | I mean really? Do creators realize that viewers could be
    | interested in several dozen channels and don't want to swamp
    | out their own notifications since Youtube's prioritization
    | gets shittier the more you subscribe to? Sorry you aren't in
    | my top 10? Maybe a video got popular on an algorithmic
    | whim...
    | 
    | I'd much rather they ask me to join a Patreon, which I am
    | very keen to do if the content is good and continues to do
    | so. But pulling that "peek behind the creator curtain" crap
    | puts me very off because it's like trying to shame you into
    | behaving differently as if you're part of the problem.
    | 
    | No... you decided to make Youtube your source of income. I
    | don't owe you crap.
 
      | wruza wrote:
      | Sometimes content is good and I feel I owe them crap. But
      | exactly! Youtube recommendation system is so cretinous and
      | only gets worse that sometimes I end up adding videos to a
      | special playlist that I can consult later and check a
      | channel without subscribing. Clicking something state-
      | changing on youtube as a viewer is like eating a trash food
      | that seems tasty, but you'll regret that later.
      | 
      | It's actually a problem with all "favorites" on every
      | platform. A browser bookmark system with notifications (a
      | little dot) would be great, because then you can
      | sort/categorize/describe/thimbnail/speeddial it, but
      | platforms crave for stupidity and make it a non-
      | configurable list instead.
 
    | robenkleene wrote:
    | If you're curious why asking for subscribers is so prevalent,
    | I recommend taking a look at this Twitter thread
    | (https://twitter.com/stalman/status/1369082704138883073) that
    | describes the before and after effects of asking for
    | subscribers, here's a quote: "Just the subs that came
    | directly from the video page were 5x what they are on similar
    | size videos".
    | 
    | I also recommend this blog post about the best way to ask for
    | subscribers: https://reneritchie.net/how-to-get-subscribers-
    | on-youtube-ev...
    | 
    | I've never done any of these things, and I'm not sure I have
    | the stomach for it, but I consider it required knowledge for
    | anyone with any interest in leveraging online attention.
 
      | _jal wrote:
      | I completely understand the pressures that lead to people
      | begging in videos.
      | 
      | My point was simply that I find it unappealing pleasure
      | viewing, so I don't understand wanting to watch them do it.
 
    | rchaud wrote:
    | Without a subscription, the visibility of their content is at
    | the mercy of the algorithm. What choice do they have? It's no
    | different from subscribing to someone's email list. It's
    | annoying, but nobody bookmarks anything these days.
 
  | seph-reed wrote:
  | It would be quite funny to make a "facebook" that automatically
  | transforms everyones photos in a similar way. Such that
  | everybody becomes attractive.
 
  | heldrida wrote:
  | True! Unless you are a 50 year old uncle who looks Lenny
  | Kravitz.
 
  | datavirtue wrote:
  | Every day I give thanks that I live under a system of
  | government that protects the individual from the wishes of the
  | majority. It's not perfect of course, but it does work.
  | 
  | No doubt people felt good about following "her" because of her
  | authenticity.
 
    | AdrianB1 wrote:
    | Just curious, where do you live and how hard is to immigrate
    | there?
 
  | everdrive wrote:
  | Part of it's just the medium. Uncles write lots of good books,
  | I imagine they teach lots of great classes. I've seen plenty
  | who have great youtube channels or podcasts. But, instagram
  | (and services like it) is all about aesthetics and nothing
  | else.
 
  | NietTim wrote:
  | However nobody can deny that his hair is amazing
 
  | DoreenMichele wrote:
  | It was probably so successful precisely because it was seeing
  | the world through the eyes of a 50 year old Japanese biker with
  | the face people expect in influencers.
  | 
  | Most young people aren't that interesting. Older people tend to
  | be more interesting, but no one wants to look at them.
  | 
  | It's like when movies show Charlie's Angels or James Bond
  | fluently speaking multiple languages and efficiently wielding
  | various weapons and skiing like Olympic skiers. You know that's
  | not real. Any one of those things takes all your time to
  | master. But it makes for a cool movie to bundle them all
  | together.
  | 
  | And maybe people fell for it in part because we watch nonsense
  | like James Bond. So it hit that note and didn't immediately set
  | off alarm bells.
 
    | bshimmin wrote:
    | I like to think James Bond is terrible at DIY and cooking, at
    | least.
 
      | DoreenMichele wrote:
      | Actual reality:
      | 
      | James Bond is like The Dread Pirate Roberts and gets played
      | by someone new every few years. Only the name stays the
      | same.
 
    | [deleted]
 
    | justicezyx wrote:
    | ...
    | 
    | Maybe this Maybe that
    | 
    | This type of argument is toxic. Adds little to the
    | conversation. If you can back any of these maybes that would
    | be great...
 
    | ce4 wrote:
    | Exactly. The one thing I immediately noticed was the ~30 year
    | old vintage Yamaha TZR 2-stroke model complete with pics of
    | open engine etc (check the small diameter exhaust pipes).
    | Which youngster would ride such a bike, let alone touch its
    | internals? This stuff is very niche, maybe not so much in
    | Japan but over here in Europe you would have to search for it
    | or pay some decent money to get it in that condition. The
    | owner probably has bought it in his 20s :)
    | 
    | Edit: the power output curve is also not for the faint of
    | heart and there's no electronic helpers, overall very
    | different to ride compared to a current 600cc model with all
    | the bells and whistles :-)
 
    | bredren wrote:
    | > Most young people aren't that interesting.
    | 
    | They are not, but I think people will get better at realizing
    | this the way many now know what it means for something to be
    | "photoshopped" whether they can identify it and subsequently
    | dismiss it or not.
    | 
    | I believe that physical "good" looks, analytical and social
    | intelligence, trade and athletic skill, and artistic talent
    | will eventually converge as our future "stars."
 
      | seph-reed wrote:
      | I worry that the norm is moving more towards specialist and
      | away from generalist. Things have been pretty stable for a
      | while. And people who invest ridiculous amounts of energy
      | in stuff like _the stock market_ or _social media_ tend to
      | get serious returns.
      | 
      | Those are not truly useful skills anywhere except this one
      | ecosystem.
 
    | katmannthree wrote:
    | To be fair, a very large chunk of old people are likewise
    | uninteresting. Aside from the general dulling of the mind
    | that comes with age, you have to actually do things with
    | those years for them to mean something.
 
      | omgJustTest wrote:
      | And you need opportunity to do it, and other people need to
      | find it appealing. You could do 1 of the 10 old / young
      | people tropes and get clicks.
      | 
      | "Meaning something" personally and "being interesting" are
      | not the same.
      | 
      | Also there isn't that much wrong with just exploiting
      | popularity machine. So a bunch of people thought you were a
      | young girl, and you're not... who cares! If anything you
      | are teaching people to stop putting so much credence into
      | the SM sphere... which can only be good.
 
      | unishark wrote:
      | Ahem they said "older", not old. 50 is middle aged.
      | 
      | Even if a person is a simple product of their times, as one
      | gets older that gets increasingly interesting. Because the
      | times change so much over the years.
 
      | [deleted]
 
    | superfrank wrote:
    | > It was probably so successful precisely because it was
    | seeing the world through the eyes of a 50 year old Japanese
    | biker with the face people expect in influencers.
    | 
    | I can't read Japanese and I used Google translate for the
    | post text (so maybe there's more depth that's lost in
    | translation), but the pictures look to be pretty "generic
    | influencer". None of those pictures look any different than
    | what you would expect from a random 20 something influencer.
    | Additionally, the text on the tweet is pretty much "I like
    | motorcycles" along with "her" age and height. Everything here
    | seems to be pretty much the same "here's a pretty girl in
    | front of something" post that instagram is full of.
    | 
    | Again, I'm only going off the pictures and Google translate,
    | so if someone who understands the culture better wants to
    | correct me, feel free, but until that happens, I'm going to
    | believe there's nothing more to this than a bunch of people
    | wanting to look at a pretty girl.
    | 
    | Edit: Ran the tweet in the article through DeepL at the
    | suggestion of some replies. Here's the translation so you all
    | can come to your own conclusions:
    | 
    | 9 Everyone!
    | 
    | Do you have a bike?
    | 
    | Spring will be here soon
    | 
    | Age: Showa era
    | 
    | Height:166
    | 
    | Lives in Ibaraki Kumamoto
    | 
    | I love to tinker with motorcycles
    | 
    | Comment: Life is once, play this world
 
      | DoreenMichele wrote:
      | I don't know anything about motorcycles. I wouldn't trust
      | Google translate because one of my son's hobbies is looking
      | up the original Japanese (and translation notes, etc) for
      | anime and other works to figure out what in the heck went
      | wrong with the translation because Japanese culture has all
      | these honorifics that English lacks and that goes weird
      | places, along with the gender neutral pronouns, among other
      | things.
      | 
      | If you know nothing of the language, culture, motorcycles,
      | motorcycle gear, etc, I am going to guess there are a lot
      | of really important details that are utterly lost on you.
 
        | csa wrote:
        | > If you know nothing of the language, culture,
        | motorcycles, motorcycle gear, etc, I am going to guess
        | there are a lot of really important details that are
        | utterly lost on you.
        | 
        | I know bikes, I know Japanese, and I lived and road in
        | Japan.
        | 
        | The translation is largely accurate (just minor
        | structural stuff that doesn't matter).
        | 
        | The only content that might matter, and it doesn't really
        | seem to, are the hashtags for the tweet that were not
        | covered above (roughly "connect with bikers" and "quick
        | biker self-intro").
        | 
        | While I agree with your general characterization of
        | Google translate when dealing with Japanese content, in
        | this case it did a decent job, largely because the
        | content was very simple and straightforward.
 
        | superfrank wrote:
        | I agree with you about Google translate not being
        | perfect. I actually wrote most of my comment up before
        | running it through translate. Even without the text, none
        | of those pictures seem especially deep, so even taking
        | the text out of the equation, I still stand by my
        | comment.
        | 
        | That being said, this is the Google translation of the
        | tweet in the article:
        | 
        | Minasan 9 (^o^) 6 Do you have a motorcycle? Spring is
        | coming soon Age: Showa *** Height: 166 Living: Ibaraki I
        | love: messing around with bikes
        | 
        | Like I said in my last comment, I know Google translate
        | is far from perfect and I'm very open to being proven
        | wrong, but I have a hard time believing that there's some
        | deep insight in this post when that is what Google
        | translate put put out. The translation seems pretty
        | "influencer" to me.
 
        | DoreenMichele wrote:
        | I've been up all night and I feel awful and I'm not
        | trying to pick a fight here. I'm just thinking of some
        | novel I read where some nouveau riche fool paid someone
        | for their riding boots because his were too new looking
        | and he wanted to look like he had been riding a long
        | time. He wanted worn-looking boots. He didn't want to
        | look like it was his first time.
        | 
        | And the guy took his money with a straight face and sold
        | him the boots even though the color of the boots signaled
        | he was a trainer or something, which is something the
        | nouveau riche guy had no way of knowing. But it would
        | have been immediately laughable to most people who were
        | in the know.
        | 
        | I am not going to go through the account and try to make
        | up BS, but the bike may be custom built, the gear he's
        | wearing may be amazingly good, the locations he is
        | posting from may be something incredibly special in some
        | way and not commenting on those details may be part of
        | the appeal.
        | 
        | I'm a writer by trade and I get paid by the word and also
        | have to meet other constraints and you can sometimes say
        | very little with three paragraphs or you can say a metric
        | fuck ton with a few well-chosen words.
        | 
        | I absolutely don't know enough about the topic. I just
        | know that when things get popular, it is often due to
        | some value-added detail that no one explicitly talks
        | about. The fact that it gets slipped in and _not_
        | commented on is part of what makes some things wildly
        | popular.
        | 
        | A density of quality info and yadda is often some element
        | of that and that is often not obvious to outsiders who
        | cannot readily tell that _this_ photo is some superficial
        | tripe and _that_ seemingly similar one is worlds apart in
        | quality, data, informativeness, whatever.
        | 
        | Anyway: This is my insomnia talking. It is absolutely not
        | intended to be ugly or pick a fight or yadda.
        | 
        | You have a great day/night/whatever.
 
        | antonvs wrote:
        | > The fact that it gets slipped in and not commented on
        | is part of what makes some things wildly popular.
        | 
        | A dogwhistle, basically? "Dog whistles use language which
        | appears normal to the majority, but which communicate
        | specific things to intended audiences."
        | 
        | Dogwhistles are most often associated with politics, but
        | the idea goes beyond that (unless you classify all
        | asymmetric/broadcasted communication as political, which
        | is not without merit.)
 
        | DoreenMichele wrote:
        | Eh, more like subtext for things people aren't
        | necessarily consciously aware of.
 
        | sam1r wrote:
        | Which is why I believe the best you can do is stay aware
        | of the present at a meta level, and track things as a
        | function of time.
        | 
        | Of course all of this requires self-drive and personal
        | determination / willingness.
 
        | superfrank wrote:
        | The original comment I was replying to was claiming that
        | the account might have been successful because it
        | presented the wisdom of a 50 year old with the face of a
        | 20 year old.
        | 
        | All the examples you gave are totally possible. There may
        | be something about the bike or the locations being
        | visited that are special, I really don't know. Even if
        | that is the case, that's not really what OP was claiming
        | and not really what I was responding to.
        | 
        | There are tons of little reasons this account could be
        | popular, but based on the little research I did, I don't
        | think it's because "she" is making posts full of wisdom,
        | years beyond "her" age.
 
        | sam1r wrote:
        | >>> I absolutely don't know enough about the topic. I
        | just know that when things get popular, it is often due
        | to some value-added detail that no one explicitly talks
        | about. The fact that it gets slipped in and not commented
        | on is part of what makes some things wildly popular
        | 
        | ^^ this
        | 
        | Thank you. Wish I could pay you per word for this.
        | Hmu@samir.ist
 
      | csa wrote:
      | > None of those pictures look any different than what you
      | would expect from a random 20 something influencer.
      | 
      | Fwiw, being born in the Showa era (ended Jan 89) would put
      | her at 31 as a minimum.
      | 
      | Minor nitpick, but I just noticed the Showa ?? birth year
      | in the tweet, and that would have raised red flags for me.
      | Even for Japan, the doctored pic doesn't really look 31,
      | much less mid-30s or older.
      | 
      | Edit: Your translation is mostly correct (The second line
      | is more like "Do you bike?", but it sounds more natural in
      | Japanese).
      | 
      | Note that this tweet also has a self-intro for
      | motorcyclists hashtag.
 
      | f00zz wrote:
      | There's a lot of motorcycle geeking in that twitter
      | account, e.g. https://twitter.com/azusagakuyuki/status/1365
      | 132939135127552
 
      | fuzxi wrote:
      | DeepL tends to be better than Google Translate for Japanese
      | <-> English translation, btw.
 
        | DoreenMichele wrote:
        | I have never heard of this. Link? How does it do for
        | French-English?
 
        | tchalla wrote:
        | DeepL is pretty great for most European languages. Here's
        | a comment on difficult French text from a previous HN
        | submission [0]
        | 
        | [0] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=15123833
 
        | Semaphor wrote:
        | deepl.com it's usually better than Google for everything
        | it supports. Though Google has been catching up.
 
        | superfrank wrote:
        | Oh, good to know. I ran it through there and there are
        | some differences, but it's not much deeper. I'm adding
        | the translation to my original comment.
 
    | Alex3917 wrote:
    | > You know that's not real.
    | 
    | You can definitely do the James Bond semester at college if
    | you're so inclined, which iirc is: wine tasting, handgun
    | safety, cross country skiing, swedish massage, and ballroom
    | dancing.
 
      | djmips wrote:
      | cross country skiing? Shouldn't it be downhill?
 
        | a4isms wrote:
        | Both movies and books agree it's downhill. Also what we
        | would call "skeleton" today. And if you go by the books,
        | a course in Bentley repair is not necessary because James
        | "has a guy."
 
        | [deleted]
 
      | CoolGuySteve wrote:
      | What college are you people going to? I never saw any of
      | these, not even as clubs, at Waterloo.
 
        | Alex3917 wrote:
        | Cornell. The specific classes are:
        | 
        | Introduction to Wines:
        | https://sha.cornell.edu/admissions-
        | programs/undergraduate/ac...
        | 
        | Introduction to Handgun Safety: https://courses.cornell.e
        | du/preview_course_nopop.php?catoid=...
        | 
        | Cross Country Skiing: https://scl.cornell.edu/coe/pe-
        | courses/spring-pe-courses/sno...
        | 
        | Swedish Massage: https://courses.cornell.edu/preview_cour
        | se_nopop.php?catoid=...
        | 
        | Ballroom Dance: https://classes.cornell.edu/browse/roster
        | /SP20/class/PE/1153
        | 
        | Of course the advantage of going to Waterloo is that you
        | can probably pass the Google coding interviews.
 
        | t0mas88 wrote:
        | I thought you were joking, but handgun safety really is a
        | college class... Just wow.
 
        | realityking wrote:
        | Svalbad University has an, AFAIK mandatory, course that
        | includes learning hot to shoot a rifle:
        | https://www.unis.no/course/as-101-arctic-survival-and-
        | safety...
        | 
        | In most of Svalbad you need to carry a rifle to defend
        | yourself against polar bears.
 
        | Alex3917 wrote:
        | It makes sense, given there are academic fields where a
        | gun might be needed. E.g. if your research involves
        | inventorying songbirds in the jungles of Colombia or
        | whatever. Even in the U.S. a lot of mycologists carry
        | weapons, so if they get shot at while accidentally
        | stumbling on an illegal weed grow or whatever they can
        | shoot back.
 
        | unishark wrote:
        | The description looks like it's about competition, not
        | just safety, akin to a class on poker. Perhaps the title
        | is a bit of spin for defensive reasons.
 
        | stilley2 wrote:
        | "I would found an institution where any person can find
        | instruction in any study." -Ezra Cornell.
        | 
        | I'm not sure if they're offered anymore, but they used to
        | have Basic Rifle Marksmanship and Epee de Guerre. My
        | friend once told me he thought my major was "weapons".
 
        | phillc73 wrote:
        | I clearly wasted my time with English Lit, Modern
        | European History, Linguistics and German in my first year
        | at University!
 
        | reaperducer wrote:
        | Don't feel bad. I wasted my time with Soviet Studies.
        | Oops.
 
        | jascii wrote:
        | Something tells me that that is still pretty relevant...
 
        | 908B64B197 wrote:
        | I mean, Cornell is an Ivy, not a regional school.
 
        | jebeng wrote:
        | > at Waterloo.
        | 
        | That's your problem, but at you had:
        | 
        | Underwater Linux .iso Distributing
        | 
        | The Computational Fluid Dynamics of(strictly
        | hypothetical) Human Sexual Intercourse in a Canoe
        | 
        | Outdoor Code Golf(Winter Session)
        | 
        | "E-Sports"
 
        | DC1350 wrote:
        | > Human Sexual Intercourse
        | 
        | That's not the Waterloo that I know
 
        | _whiteCaps_ wrote:
        | I took Introduction to Wine Science as my 'non
        | engineering' course. Lab component was tasting - but you
        | had to spit it out.
        | 
        | It was one of the hardest courses I took at university -
        | so much memorization of various wine regions around the
        | world, grape varietals, etc.
 
      | kbenson wrote:
      | Completely ignores political science, economics and
      | physics? Checks out. ;)
 
        | antonvs wrote:
        | James Bond can't afford to worry about physics when he's
        | skiing off the edge of a mountain onto the top of a
        | plane.
 
        | cobookman wrote:
        | Wouldn't that require an understanding of physics to
        | properly make his landing :D
 
        | WalterBright wrote:
        | It does work if we're living in a simulation.
 
        | samatman wrote:
        | "Is a Mongolian horse archer applying physics even though
        | he has no idea what physics is and it hasn't even been
        | invented yet" is a pretty deep philosophical rabbit hole.
 
        | aksss wrote:
        | In the same way that one can appreciate good wine without
        | having memorized the names of all the world's grape
        | varieties.
 
        | frenchy wrote:
        | Understanding physics wouldn't cut it, what you really
        | need is a generous dose of plot armor.
 
        | jnsie wrote:
        | Absolutely not! If he understood physics he would
        | understand that the landing is impossible, and would
        | therefore die in the attempt. That he doesn't know the
        | landing is impossible is what makes it possible, and he
        | lives. Simple.
 
        | a_t48 wrote:
        | Ahh, the Hitchiker's Guide method.
 
      | tablespoon wrote:
      | > You can definitely do the James Bond semester at college
      | if you're so inclined, which iirc is: wine tasting, handgun
      | safety, cross country skiing, swedish massage, and ballroom
      | dancing.
      | 
      | Pretty sure James Bond's handgun use is more on the unsafe
      | side of things. I mean, he does have a license to kill and
      | uses it frequently.
 
        | aksss wrote:
        | nit: "deadly" is not "unsafe". You can be perfectly safe
        | in your firearm handling and still wield the power to
        | kill other beings. "Unsafe" presents the risk of being
        | _unintentionally_ deadly, but being _intentionally_
        | deadly is perfectly compatible with being safe in the gun
        | 's handling.
 
      | [deleted]
 
      | martinflack wrote:
      | Sigh. Where was this wisdom when I was an undergrad...!
 
        | [deleted]
 
      | jmgrosen wrote:
      | Not sure whether I'd prefer to be Bond, or a pirate:
      | archery, fencing, pistol, and sailing.
 
        | reaperducer wrote:
        | Bond. Simply for the hygiene.
 
        | [deleted]
 
        | aksss wrote:
        | I think Bond is good with a sailing yacht, pistol, and
        | fencing. Just missing the archery unless some Bond nerd
        | wants to point to some Bond archery (and I'd believe it).
 
      | WalterBright wrote:
      | You're not going to learn ballroom dancing in a semester.
      | 
      | By learning it I mean being proficient with it that you're
      | smooth and comfortable with it, and can make your partner
      | look good.
 
        | usehackernews wrote:
        | The point of the James Bond semester is more so about the
        | lack of learning
 
        | nerdponx wrote:
        | Waste of school tuition perhaps, but certainly not time
        | wasted learning any of those skills.
 
  | [deleted]
 
  | polote wrote:
  | > The majority of "influencers" are young women,
  | 
  | Just to add on that.
  | 
  | "Though women make up 77% of the influencer market, male
  | influencers are paid almost 100% more. " [1]
  | 
  | And 88% of female influencers are less than 34 years old. [2]
  | 
  | So 67 % of influencers are young women (if 34 years old is
  | considered young)
  | 
  | Also women get 10 times more like than men [3]
  | 
  | [1] https://klear.com/blog/influencer-pricing-2019/
  | 
  | [2] https://www.statista.com/statistics/893733/share-
  | influencers...
  | 
  | [3] https://www.influencerbay.com/blog/the-future-of-
  | influence-i...
 
    | greiskul wrote:
    | I would like more data for [1], with a breakdown per gender
    | of each category and size. The data they show could be under
    | the effect of a Simpsons paradox from the way they present
    | it.
 
      | pojzon wrote:
      | Sorry but I have to ask - all 76 genders ?
      | 
      | I find that discussion extremely hilarious.
 
    | jedberg wrote:
    | > male influencers are paid almost 100% more
    | 
    | This isn't entirely surprising. They're much more rare so
    | there is lot more competition for their services, piled on
    | top of the usual biases in our society against paying women
    | equally.
 
    | diydsp wrote:
    | > Women charge an average of $351 while Men charge $459.[1]
    | 
    | That's 31% more, not almost 100% more.
 
      | boomboomsubban wrote:
      | I can't see the full data, but as I assume they didn't just
      | blatantly make that up men also likely receive more deals.
      | In normal business terms, women would get 31% less per hour
      | and also x fewer hours.
 
        | Chris2048 wrote:
        | There is clearly some nuance here, that they aren't
        | making clear in order to headline "most surprising
        | result" without context.
 
    | mattigames wrote:
    | > "Though women make up 77% of the influencer market, male
    | influencers are paid almost 100% more. " [1]
    | 
    | But thats how suply-and-demand workforce always work doesn't
    | it? Too much people doing the same job tends to lower the
    | wage for that job; and because a lot of companies compite for
    | different markets when sponsoring a male influencers vs
    | female influencers (e.g. "this is the shaving cream I use" vs
    | "this is the bra's brand I use") they are income-wise 2
    | different jobs.
 
  | vmception wrote:
  | lol, and yeah it worked.
  | 
  | I also don't think there is an issue here.
 
  | arkh wrote:
  | > 50 year old uncle
  | 
  | Also, 50 year old people tend to have ideas which are frowned
  | upon in the Valley. Especially if they're not from the US.
  | 
  | So when enough people start following them, they get removed.
 
    | vecinu wrote:
    | Can you give some examples of what you're referring to? I'm
    | drawing a blank.
 
      | arkh wrote:
      | > Don't marry, don't cohabit and even avoid dating women.
      | 
      | Now you're an alt-right sexist person and anyone
      | subscribing to your channel is one step away from shooting
      | a school.
 
  | ArnoVW wrote:
  | Showed this to my wife. Her reply? "makes sense. Women do the
  | inverse if they want to be taken seriously in business".
  | 
  | I remember reading an article in the French press, about two
  | women founders that mailed the off-site dev team under the
  | moniker of Mike and Bob.
  | 
  | They were fed up with being second guessed on business
  | decisions and had found out that 'Bob' was getting less
  | pushback than 'Marissa'.
 
  | chiefalchemist wrote:
  | I think you're right, sans the bit about human nature.
  | Traditionally influence is a function of understanding and
  | wisdom, and that is a function of time and years.
  | 
  | The internet changed that.
  | 
  | Now it's a function of perceived popularity and perceived
  | influence. That has become a (cheap?) proxy. It's not the
  | person per se, but the "social proof" attached to that person.
  | 
  | We've been trained to use quantity instead of quality. Is that
  | human nature?
  | 
  | Attacted to a pretty face? Yes. That is human nature.
 
  | Blikkentrekker wrote:
  | Beauty is a skill like any other that has both a factor of
  | talent and training to hone it, that, as with many skills,
  | declines with age.
  | 
  | It happens to be a skill that influences require for their
  | work.
  | 
  | Here, I see no problem; where I see a problem is that often
  | those who hire judge those on their beauty where their beauty
  | would play no factor in their performance, not only hurting
  | those whom they would hire, but their own finances in the
  | processes.
  | 
  | Of course, the scariest part of all is how much more easily the
  | ugly are found guilty on the same level of evidence than the
  | beautiful.
 
  | slightwinder wrote:
  | > The majority of "influencers" are young women
  | 
  | Is this actually true, or just bias from your own interessts?
  | If we look at technical stuff and gaming, we see far more
  | successful male influencers. Similar with entertainment-
  | industry.
  | 
  | > and only a minority would want to follow a 50 year old
  | 
  | This more or less is true, because not many like to see
  | unattractive people doing boring things. But the point here is,
  | this in not because of gender or sex, it's about the quality of
  | content and chemistry with the consumers. An old ugly guy
  | without any real skill, would be usually as unsuccesful as an
  | old ugly woman without any real skill. Though, for both there
  | always is chance to find niche to sellout your content over
  | something, the chance is pretty low.
  | 
  | With younger and more attractive people, the chances are
  | significant higher, because they have more selling points
  | besides the content itself, thus they sell better. But it also
  | depends on the target-group and content.
  | 
  | > it's human nature
  | 
  | No, it's human culture. People sell according to the crowds
  | reception on what the gender is suposed to do. So woman sell
  | better in female-stuff, men better with manly stuff. Woman do
  | have a slight advantage, in that they are the gender which in
  | most cultures is educated from early days to sellout. They
  | dress up, use fancy cloths, catter to the people, etc. This
  | works better for laymen when becoming influencers, because
  | woman have more likely the skills to sell themself on a broader
  | are, while most men need to learn it first.
 
    | watwut wrote:
    | > Though, for both there always is chance to find niche to
    | sellout your content over something, the chance is pretty
    | low.
    | 
    | In both cases, I think it would be fair to call that niche
    | real skill.
 
    | tsdlts wrote:
    | > Women sell better in female stuff
    | 
    | Cute women doing traditionally "male things" sells like hot
    | cakes. Not so much the other way around.
 
      | nix23 wrote:
      | >Cute women doing traditionally "male things" sells like
      | hot cakes.
      | 
      | True, but are really bad in selling serious Business stuff.
 
        | cambalache wrote:
        | Are they?...Take the girls from BoutineLA (an Instagram
        | account), give them some training and send them to sell
        | B2B, I would bet easily on their potential returns
 
  | war1025 wrote:
  | > The majority of "influencers" are young women, and only a
  | minority would want to follow a 50 year old uncle.
  | 
  | One interesting side effect of this is that some of the most
  | popular male YouTube channels I follow never show the host's
  | face. Everything is carefully staged to only show their hands /
  | body.
 
    | [deleted]
 
    | neom wrote:
    | i've spent more time that I would care to admit trying to
    | find a slip up reflection form Lock Picking Lawyer. So far no
    | dice.
 
      | NikolaeVarius wrote:
      | Its not that hard to find the guy, Google better.
 
    | Hitton wrote:
    | Youtubers are mostly content creators, while most instagram
    | "influencers" only try to look pretty.
 
    | NikolaeVarius wrote:
    | Its strange because random old people channels produce great
    | content. Its just that, most of them don't try to be annoying
    | influencers. I follow some old dude who repairs his
    | motorcycle and writes music. He doesnt talk, and its great.
 
      | mrweasel wrote:
      | I follow some guy in France who restore random stuff, he
      | doesn't talk and there's no music, it's fantastic.
 
      | rchaud wrote:
      | Very true. I came across a channel run by a 60 something
      | man where he sits in his music room, puts on a record and
      | talks about what that piece of music means to him, when he
      | first heard it.
      | 
      | I usually don't watch the whole video as it can get a bit
      | dry, but otherwise it is nice to just see someone
      | expressing themself without shilling their Patreon or using
      | clickbait thumbnails and titles like the more commercial
      | "personal" channels do.
 
        | pjc50 wrote:
        | I miss https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Desmond_Carrington
        | 's show, which was basically that on BBC radio. Him, his
        | cat, and a huge collection of old records.
        | 
        | (BBC radio is at the very opposite end from begging for
        | likes; once someone establishes a show, if it's not in a
        | highly contended timeslot it can basically run forever no
        | matter how obscure or unfashionable it is, until the
        | presenter dies)
 
        | rchaud wrote:
        | RIP John Peel. Remarkable how many iconic
        | punk/indie/weird bands he introduced to the mainstream.
 
        | anigbrowl wrote:
        | Doesn't that sort of depend on the channel? eg Radio 1
        | has always been Obnoxiously! Trendy! Pop! Music!, Radio 2
        | a lightweight blend of news, musical standards, and
        | entertainment, Radio 3 classical or music and Very
        | Serious Discourse, and Radio 4 intellectual topics,
        | politics, and and quality news, little or no music. I
        | know there are a few other radio channels but I can't
        | remember what their focus is. And of course all of these
        | channels have variations of their own depending what time
        | of the day/week people are listening.
 
      | mos_basik wrote:
      | Sounds like my kind of thing. Got a link?
 
        | NikolaeVarius wrote:
        | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=av3gmXBuBS0&t=557s
 
      | antihero wrote:
      | It's so refreshing to have content that is actually just
      | good content and isn't some trainwreck of seeking attention
      | from an increasingly more vapid audience.
 
    | lsllc wrote:
    | This Old Tony? (highly recommended btw!)
    | 
    | https://www.youtube.com/user/featony
    | 
    | Although there was one where you did get to see his face.
 
      | sly010 wrote:
      | There is one (!!!) video where he shows his face. He looks
      | more like 35 to me. Unless of course he is a Japanese girl
      | using whatsapp.
 
      | Scene_Cast2 wrote:
      | AvE (Arduino vs Evil) is similar
      | https://www.youtube.com/channel/UChWv6Pn_zP0rI6lgGt3MyfA
 
      | michaelt wrote:
      | This Old Tony? Just hands.
      | 
      | AvE? Just hands.
      | 
      | Marco Reps? Just hands... wearing gloves.
      | 
      | LockPickingLawyer? Just hands.
      | 
      | BosnianBill? Just hands.
      | 
      | The Signal Path? Largely just hands, although he has
      | appeared occasionally.
      | 
      | Wendover Productions? Disembodied voice.
      | 
      | CGP Grey? Disembodied voice.
      | 
      | Real Engineering? Disembodied voice.
      | 
      | Not to mention innumerable video game streamers.
      | 
      | Of course, disembodied voices aren't in-and-of-themselves a
      | new cultural phenomenon: Radio has existed for years, as
      | have podcasts. And there are TV formats like nature and
      | history documentaries where the narrator may rarely or
      | never appear on screen.
      | 
      | And even on Youtube, there are a number of female voice-
      | only celebrities - for example "vtubers", where a female
      | voice actor plays games while pretending to be a cute anime
      | girl. Of course, one could say that's an example _for_ the
      | theory people want to see beautiful women, not _against_
 
    | yumraj wrote:
    | And the ones where I've seen men are related to DIY fixing
    | things at home, where an old plumber is more trusted then a
    | young one.
 
    | watwut wrote:
    | Arent youtube channels generally male dominated? At least
    | most of what I watch is by males and they are not ashamed to
    | show their faces.
    | 
    | I watch art, some crafts occasionally tech and pop
    | commentary. Some sport.
    | 
    | I dont see people being interested in 50 years old women
    | either in general.
 
  | RupertEisenhart wrote:
  | It's also the incongruence which people like I think.
  | 
  | It would be great to see Adolfo Mateo[0] as a 20 year old
  | Japanese girl, not that he needs any improvement as he is.
  | 
  | [0] https://www.youtube.com/user/SMOKERSOFCIGARSPIPES
 
  | the_arun wrote:
  | I wish people use this trick to create dent in the universe.
  | For eg. use face of pretty young girls to bring positive
  | changes in the planet - assuming everyone wants to follow young
  | girls & believe in what they say.
 
    | krapht wrote:
    | They do it in Japan. Everything has a cute anime mascot.
 
      | m4rtink wrote:
      | It's actually a pretty useful in practice!
      | 
      | Say you need a safety warning tables for your railway
      | station - pandas dangerously fussing with selfie sticks on
      | a crowded platform are much more enjoyable and memorable
      | than just some more generic stick figures doing the same.
      | 
      | You can also encode culture into mascots - everyone
      | probably knows the bear mascot Kumamon (yes, there are many
      | bears in Kumamoto and they occasionally eat somebody) but
      | take forever example Shimaneko, the mascot of the Shimano
      | pprefecture. Neko means cat and indeed its a cat mascot -
      | with a strange hat! And that hat is the roof of the ancient
      | and famous Izumo shrine located in the Shimano prefecture.
      | 
      | Or the even more obscure Kinosaki Kounori: https://mobile.t
      | witter.com/jrw_fukuchiyama/status/1046927976...
      | 
      | On the picture you can see a young female anime character
      | in a summer kimono (yukata).
      | 
      | This is the mascot of a limitted express train (!) that
      | goes from Osaka and Kyoto to the famous onsen (hot spring)
      | town of Kinosaki (hence the Kinosaki in the name). The the
      | other name Kounori is from the name of the train, Kou no
      | tori - oriental white stork.
      | 
      | Which goes right back to the founding legend of Kinosaki
      | about how they built the first bath after observing a stork
      | using the natural hot spring to heal its wounds.
      | 
      | And the last thing - the summer kimono/yukata. If you look
      | closely she also has a ticket stamping tool and a railway
      | company employee badge - that's because station employees
      | really do wear yukata in the summer in Kinosaki instead of
      | their usual uniforms! :)
      | 
      | And the kimono pattern includes of course the oriental
      | white stork but also - fireworks! And that's because of
      | course in the summer there are regular fireworks shows in
      | Kinosaki! :)
      | 
      | Really some much culture and symbolism (not to mention hard
      | work!) goes to japanese mascot characters!
 
      | lscharen wrote:
      | Lest people forget the OS-tan trend of the early 2000's.
      | 
      | https://www.ostan-
      | collections.net/wiki/index.php/List_of_Can...
 
    | wruza wrote:
    | Sounds like a great idea for politicians at the next election
    | cycle everywhere. Don't believe in what they say though. I
    | mean... both.
 
    | jdminhbg wrote:
    | Here's one example: https://grist.org/energy/this-radiant-
    | model-wants-you-to-sto...
 
  | aksss wrote:
  | I'm still sorting out what we really mean when we keep
  | referring to the guy as "an uncle". Is he also a father? Is he
  | married? What's the description of "uncle" adding or informing
  | us of? My immediate reaction makes me think he's a 50yo with no
  | kids, maybe a girlfriend, but his sister had kids. I don't know
  | that this is an accurate perception or if it even aligns with
  | how other people read it. Just seems kind of weird that he's
  | summarized as this title.
 
    | viraptor wrote:
    | "An uncle" is just a way to refer to someone mature,
    | unrelated to family connections. Kind of like the popular
    | "Uncle Roger" https://www.youtube.com/c/mrnigelng (usually
    | I'd expect a "generic uncle" to have no family of his own)
 
  | dfxm12 wrote:
  | I don't know if they're literally uncles, but men in that age-
  | range like Elon Musk, Louis Cole, Joe Rogan, brooklyn dad
  | defiant, Donald Trump, etc. are huge influencers (orders of
  | magnitude more so than @azusagakuyuki). It's a bit handwave-y
  | to say "nobody wants to see an uncle".
 
  | fossuser wrote:
  | Yeah, that's my take. You see it often in other areas too -
  | it's a lot easier to get thousands of followers as an
  | attractive person (especially an attractive young woman, but it
  | works for men too). The ability to more easily build a large
  | audience and then leverage that is huge (and can make a ton of
  | money).
  | 
  | My general heuristic is online personas from attractive people
  | are often over valued (specifically considering the value of
  | things they say/do - not their ability to make money which is
  | huge) and when you compare pretty people with high follower
  | numbers to unattractive people (or just people that don't lead
  | with their prettiness) with high follower numbers, the latter
  | are often better quality/say more interesting things. Someone
  | leading with their prettiness has a big advantage in getting
  | attention, even if what they say is dumb.
  | 
  | There's a lot of pseudo-intellectualized bullshit on twitter
  | that gets a lot more attention than it would otherwise because
  | the person is young and pretty, but would not get nearly the
  | same attention if they looked different.
  | 
  | It reminds me a lot of Liking What You See: A Documentary,
  | which is the last Ted Chiang story in his first short story
  | collection - I think it's worth reading.
  | 
  | Obviously attractiveness is only one factor among many, but I
  | suspect it's a much bigger factor than people currently think.
 
  | ASalazarMX wrote:
  | > nobody want's to see an uncle
  | 
  | I think it depends of your style. Of course I wouldn't want to
  | see an uncle if I were looking for sexy girls being rad, but I
  | would love to see a 50yo uncle tell biking stories, motorcycle
  | repair, or his brand of manly zen.
  | 
  | Definitely no one wants to see an uncle posing as a young girl,
  | and I am also intrigued by why did an uncle wanted that badly
  | to feel admired on Twitter in the first place. Someone younger
  | I would understand.
 
    | godelski wrote:
    | Rather think about "What portion of the population wants to
    | follow a sexy girl on a bike?" vs "What portion of the
    | population wants to follow an uncle?" rather than "does a
    | population that wants to follow an uncle exist?" I think it
    | is pretty clear that the size of the group that wants to
    | follow the sexy girl is larger than the group that wants to
    | follow the uncle. Larger audience to be able to pull from.
 
  | golemiprague wrote:
  | That's not entirely correct, there are many male influencers,
  | you will just find them in youtube rather than instagram,
  | usually compiling serious and valuable content, especially when
  | it comes to cars and bikes.
  | 
  | It is just that women do what they always do and men do what
  | they always do, women present themselves, men do the work.
 
  | bawolff wrote:
  | Not to put to fine a point on it, but aren't influencers
  | essentially a type of very soft-core porn? I don't think they
  | really expose people to world views, superficial or otherwise.
 
  | danso wrote:
  | Of the adults on this top 26 list of Youtube accounts, only 1
  | is a woman, and she has less than a third of Pewdiepie's
  | subscriber base:
  | 
  | https://www.businessinsider.com/most-popular-youtubers-with-...
 
    | maerF0x0 wrote:
    | It's worth noting that platforms tend to have a gender(sex?
    | sorry I'm bad with the terminology), bias that skews
    | male/female. I seem to recall hearing that Youtube skews male
    | (in viewership) and IG female. (if someone has links to
    | stats, thanks in advance)
    | 
    | I wonder if this is at play with these two cases?
 
    | ryanmarsh wrote:
    | Now do Instagram and Tiktok
 
      | sam1r wrote:
      | Tikthot
 
    | Fricken wrote:
    | I follow a lot of rock climbing on insta, and the top men
    | definitely have more followers than the top women, but if
    | it's a pic of an average climber on an average climb, it'll
    | get way more likes if the climber is a woman.
    | 
    | In the old world of professional climbing, when the magazines
    | decided who was worthy of attention and accolades,
    | sponsorships were generally handed out according to merit.
    | 
    | Now days, sponsorship is shifting more and more to climbers
    | who are media friendly and good at drawing attention to
    | themselves. Top tier climbers are now refashioning themselves
    | into mediocre youtube celebrities, with mixed results.
 
    | wutbrodo wrote:
    | I think most top YouTubers are considered "creators" more
    | than "influencers". It takes a substantially different set of
    | skills to create videos people want to watch than photos
    | people want to view, and intuitively you'd expect the latter
    | to tilt more towards first-impression attractiveness.
    | Instagram fits more closely with the way this guy used his
    | Twitter account (pictures and text), I can't seem to find an
    | authoritative list of independently-famous Instagram
    | influencers, but the lists I've seen consist primarily of
    | models.
 
      | mywittyname wrote:
      | Almost every guy in that list is pretty damn handsome. The
      | notable exception is Luisito Comunica, who I'm guessing
      | makes up for it by being exceptionally interesting.
 
        | wutbrodo wrote:
        | "Pretty handsome" is relative. Pewdiepie is a good-
        | looking guy, but his analogues on Instagram are 1000x
        | more so. And I can't imagine someone like Casey Neistat
        | becoming remotely as big an Instagram star as he is on
        | YouTube.
        | 
        | It's also telling how male the list is.
 
    | goldenchrome wrote:
    | When people say "influencer" they're usually referring to the
    | long-tail of people with 10k+++ followers who don't really
    | create anything other than a curated snapshot of their life.
    | They're usually on platforms like Instagram and Twitter where
    | the bar to post content is very low. They make their money by
    | posting sponsored content, because they have no other way of
    | monetizing their audience (they have no skills except for
    | building audiences).
    | 
    | The top 26 list of YouTubers is filled with influential
    | people, and many people would say that they're influencers,
    | but they're not typical examples.
 
      | Sohcahtoa82 wrote:
      | > (they have no skills except for building audiences).
      | 
      | And that "skill" is based almost entirely on being
      | attractive.
      | 
      | And these days, with camera and video filters, even that's
      | not necessary any more.
 
    | undefined1 wrote:
    | to dominate the top of leaderboards, whether it's Youtube or
    | Starcraft, takes a single-minded obsession that is more
    | common with men.
    | 
    | Pewdiepie was obsessed with having the most subscribers. Mr.
    | Beast did little else than obsess over the Youtube algorithm
    | for many years on end.
 
  | dgellow wrote:
  | It's human nature to follow only young influencers? That's a
  | weird claim. Sounds like we take the current situation and
  | justify it afterwards by saying "that's human nature".
 
    | pcbro141 wrote:
    | Sex sells. Young attractive women attract the most sexual
    | attention of any demographic (see any online dating/hookup
    | site's stats, porn stats, etc).
    | 
    | And the commenter didn't say "only". Yes, people follow non-
    | sexual influencers all the time, but it's much easier to get
    | followers if you're sexually attractive.
 
    | alienthrowaway wrote:
    | > It's human nature to follow only young influencers?
    | 
    | Marketers have known this for years before the appearance of
    | "influencers" - youth sells, and a young women have better
    | cross-gender appeal than young men. Go ahead an open any pre-
    | WWW paper magazine, count the number of women vs. men who
    | appear in the adverts for non-gendered products
 
    | coliveira wrote:
    | Not a weird claim at all, you have to be very self conscious
    | not to click and watch young people doing whatever. It is a
    | natural tendency humans have. It has worked in any
    | entertainment industry (from Hollywood to Youtube) because it
    | exploits how our brains are wired.
 
    | mrweasel wrote:
    | I didn't write "only".
 
    | shaftway wrote:
    | If a majority of people do something because that's what they
    | want to do, doesn't that _by definition_ make it human
    | nature?
 
      | dgellow wrote:
      | That's ignoring how much control and influence the platform
      | itself has. It's not a free market, the platform decides
      | who trends and what matters or not.
 
      | pessimizer wrote:
      | No. A majority of people doing something in a particular
      | moment doesn't mean that it is an intrinsic quality of
      | people. Otherwise we'll start to say that Coca-Cola and The
      | Simpsons are genetic destiny.
      | 
      | There have been plenty of times during history during which
      | nobody cared what young people thought. I'd venture to say
      | the majority of it.
 
        | andresp wrote:
        | Nobody cares about what young people think now either. We
        | are talking about a very small subset of model-like
        | stylish youngsters (mostly women). 99.99% continue to be
        | ignored as usual.
 
      | anigbrowl wrote:
      | No, it makes it a _kind_ of human nature. People are not
      | homogenous, there are distinct sub-types of personality,
      | albeit not that many.
 
  | baq wrote:
  | He has a point and has found a solution.
  | 
  | Want to influence people? Use faceapp to change yourself into a
  | face people feel good seeing (pretty girl strikes the correct
  | neurons in majority of viewers). In the best case limit
  | everybody does this and hopefully it stops being effective.
  | Worst case every influencing person does this anyway?
 
    | technofiend wrote:
    | He's rediscovered the second meaning of MMORPG: Millions of
    | Men Role Playing Girls. People have been representing
    | themselves online as female to gain some advantage for a very
    | long time.
 
    | andresp wrote:
    | That might contribute to a diversity of perspectives but I
    | wonder what would be the consequences for society when
    | everyone needs to reconcile their online appearance with
    | their real world appearance.
 
      | munk-a wrote:
      | Can we clarify what a real world appearance is here? Does
      | your real world appearance involving nice looking clothes,
      | makeup or having showered recently?
      | 
      | Why do we even really care about real world appearance,
      | appearance is something that we have very little control
      | over and if we've accidentally created something in the
      | internet that allows folks to escape their appearance can't
      | we just celebrate it?
      | 
      | We seem to be accepting that gender identification and body
      | dysmorphia are both real things that people deal with and
      | this meta-society where you can look however you please is
      | probably a really helpful outlet for those who don't like
      | how people judge their appearance from day-to-day - I think
      | it's important that we preserve this freedom and try and
      | ascend beyond judging people by their meat-bags.
 
    | Blikkentrekker wrote:
    | Many do so openly but with animated avatars that duplicate
    | their facial expressions by way of facial motion capture.
    | 
    | They effectively play an animated character live and voice it
    | as they perform it's facial expressions.
    | 
    | On the subject of Japanese gender changes, a most interesting
    | one is played by a Japanese female artist who plays a male
    | character that looks like a female once again. -- this artist
    | has a particular habit of creating male characters that look
    | as though they be female.
    | 
    | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aRkO-V29fFw&ab_channel=Spiri.
    | ..
 
| rfreiberger wrote:
| I'm just here for the two stroke that we never got in the states.
| :(
 
| decafninja wrote:
| Male or female, if you're very good looking, you probably could
| achieve some degree of success as a social media "influencer"
| these days. As people have said, thus is human nature since
| forever.
| 
| With the rise of digital avatars that are testing the limits of
| photorealism, I'm wondering if your actual physical appearance
| starts to become less of a limiting factor for things like this
| though.
| 
| Heck, there is now an entire K-pop idol girl group launching
| composed entirely of digital characters. While not 100% perfect,
| I'm shocked at how realistic they look and act:
| 
| https://www.koreaboo.com/news/ai-kpop-girl-group-deep-real-a...
 
| wccrawford wrote:
| I'm not buying it. Notice that the girl's hair covers her ear in
| different ways each time, so it can't be her hair and ear, it has
| to be his.
| 
| But her hair doesn't actually match his hair. So that's not it,
| either.
| 
| These shows are all about shock, and I wouldn't be surprised if
| they were fooled as well.
 
  | dorkwood wrote:
  | Maybe the "reflection" they used to catch him was the fake, and
  | all the others are real.
 
  | Cthulhu_ wrote:
  | The faceapp thing does hair as well though. It's probably less
  | jarring if it has 'close' hair to work with to begin with.
 
  | feintruled wrote:
  | I wonder too - last time I tried faceapp it did a very
  | convincing gender swap on me, but the face changed
  | significantly with every photo I took - depending on angle,
  | lighting, who knows? I began to suspect to wasn't making 'me'
  | into a woman at all, just superimposing a female face that fit.
  | (One of the best transforms actually looked like my wife, which
  | was a moment for Freudian reflection).
  | 
  | Anyway, unless faceapp has improved a lot, I'm sceptical this
  | guy was always able to show as the same 'person'.
 
| ChuckMcM wrote:
| That is a fun take on "projection." :-) I expect to see a lot
| more of this with the wide availability of GAN driven image
| networks that can change faces/voices etc. Its like autotune for
| looks. Given how he was found I expect a software update that
| removes an person image in a mirror making them effectively
| vampires :-).
| 
| For the youngsters in the crowd, we used to have these phone
| numbers you could call where you could be connected with a "sexy
| woman who would talk to you and fantasize with you." Guess what,
| the only requirement for the job was "sexy voice" _not_ actually
| being all that sexy. Poor chaps paying $1 /minute to have phone
| sex with 45 - 50 year old women who not only have sexy voices but
| know a thing or two about sex.
| 
| "Influencers" are, as a money making entity, in the same genus as
| phone sex, product salespeople, and actors. They are there to
| create an attractive illusion that increases sales/market
| activity around an attached product.
 
  | the-dude wrote:
  | Is there an English equivalent to the Dutch saying _you need to
  | learn on an old bike_ ?
 
    | ChuckMcM wrote:
    | A) that is hilarious, and B) not that I have heard.
 
| fudged71 wrote:
| Wow leave the guy alone. Is this any different from 'exposing' a
| cross dresser etc?
 
| jeffnv wrote:
| He's got great hair.
 
  | tpmx wrote:
  | Perhaps he's been using Christopher Walken's technique of
  | pulling on your own hair for five minutes every morning to
  | encourage blood circulation in your scalp? :)
  | 
  | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=czK6ReYbaTk (Conan, 1m43s)
 
  | goldcd wrote:
  | Not very hackery - but that was my prominent thought at the end
  | of the article.
  | 
  | I mean maybe there is a tech point, that hair has historically
  | been a pretty hard thing to model, so I'd presume hard to
  | correct with a filter - so maybe its his luscious locks that
  | helped sell the ruse (and I'll need to wait another few years
  | to have my hairline pseudo-restored)
 
    | Karawebnetwork wrote:
    | FaceApp also has a hair filter. You can change the color,
    | make it curly, longer, etc.
    | 
    | In fact, it's popular in the transgender community. People
    | can experiment with their new gender identity with a few
    | clicks. You can transform a bald masculine figure into a soft
    | model with long hair that retains some of your bone structure
    | (and vice versa). Here is a tweet of one such transformation
    | done on an actor using a stack of FaceApp filters:
    | https://twitter.com/KaiqueBanks/status/1276185681660968961
    | 
    | Here's the ad for the hairs feature:
    | https://www.facebook.com/watch/?v=600497397462983 (Apologies
    | for linking to Facebook, it seems that they only advertise
    | features there.)
 
  | aspaviento wrote:
  | I've seen also very realistic wigs in a Japanese video so it
  | could be fake too.
 
| [deleted]
 
| NikolaeVarius wrote:
| The rise of normies on the internet has shown that they have
| forgotten the cardinal rule of the internet. No one is who they
| say they are.
 
| pbhjpbhj wrote:
| I'm hoping it ends up the 50yo is also a fake ...
| 
| I'm not saying I wouldn't be fooled, but the female face looks
| too smooth to me, not in a make-up way but in a post-processed
| separately to the rest of the image way (doesn't appear to have
| the noise that the rest of the image does?).
 
  | lotsofpulp wrote:
  | That's how most of Snapchat/Instagram and other selfies look to
  | me. I assume whatever app people are using are all creating
  | "fake" pictures smoothing their skin and whatnot.
 
    | dorkwood wrote:
    | A lot of phones now come with this feature in the default
    | camera app. I had a family member uploading group photos that
    | all had smoothing applied to our skin. They said it made us
    | look better. I found it offensive.
 
      | mywittyname wrote:
      | Especially since it just makes you look "worse" by
      | comparison in real life. I've actually had this happen to
      | me: meeting a friend I've only seen online for the better
      | part of 10 years. My brain stalled upon seeing them because
      | I knew who they were, but they just look so much worse than
      | their pictures.
 
  | Cthulhu_ wrote:
  | Nobody's surprised by that anymore though; skin care and makeup
  | hides a lot of sin, and photo filters are commonplace.
  | /r/instagramreality has a LOT of that.
 
  | LudwigNagasena wrote:
  | Lots of people post-process their photos, especially female
  | influencers who use their beauty to attract subscribers.
 
| wruza wrote:
| Can't say that thread is missing the point, but he doesn't look
| like a young girl, because what you see is not a young girl
| either. It is a simulation of what a young girl would look like
| if she applied a ton of made up makeup (hence the word) to look
| attractive.
| 
| If you're asking yourself why females tend to have more followers
| than males, and males get more followers when disguised as a
| female, remember that the "attractive" part is neither female nor
| male, not even human. It is our notion of perfect attractiveness
| that is completely made up and females exploited that since
| forever because sexual behavior asymmetry (women attract, men
| approach).
| 
| In a world without makeup, uv filters, clothes and odor
| deception, almost everyone is a red uncle biker.
 
| eplanit wrote:
| There should be a Catfishing award created and given to this guy.
| His motives were really very innocent, which adds to the beauty
| of the ruse.
 
  | Karawebnetwork wrote:
  | It is catfishing if it's not done to get something out of a
  | specific victim?
 
    | ed25519FUUU wrote:
    | In this case it's attention.
 
      | dheera wrote:
      | If he actually catfished I don't support it, but I feel
      | like if he was doing it only for attention it's not such a
      | bad thing.
      | 
      | After all yes if you're an old guy people will discriminate
      | against you in who they follow, and among other things, he
      | just exposed that fact for the world to realize.
 
      | boublepop wrote:
      | If using a filter to improve your looks to gain attention
      | is categorized as catfishing, then suddenly every single
      | celebrity and model is in that category.
      | 
      | The guy changed his looks using a filter, it's nothing that
      | haven't been done to death by the kardashians. The novel
      | element here is just the sharp contrast between his before
      | and after personas.
 
| anotheryou wrote:
| A great freedom :). Reminds me of harroway's cyborg manifesto.
| It's not an exact match, but interesting to read along this
| phenomenon:
| 
| > Cyborg imagery can suggest a way out of the maze of dualisms in
| which we have explained our bodies and our tools to ourselves.
| This is a dream not of a common language, but of a powerful
| infidel heteroglossia. It is an imagination of a feminist
| speaking in tongues to strike fear into the circuits of the
| supersavers of the new right. It means both building and
| destroying machines, identities, categories, relationships, space
| stories. Though both are bound in the spiral dance, I would
| rather be a cyborg than a goddess.
| 
| He of course chose the goddess, but still breaks the gender
| dualism and got rid of his age.
 
| davesque wrote:
| There's an interesting train of thought that could follow from
| this. I've been trying to figure out what could eventually enable
| people to realize that most of what they see on the internet is
| entirely made up (or could be). Perhaps nothing would make this
| more clear than considering that literally any face or persona
| you see on social media could be entirely fictional. For example,
| in light of this Japanese biker uncle story, how could you ever
| really feel confident about dating online? And if you didn't,
| what's the alternative? Well, if you still trust your own eyes,
| there's always the physical world.
 
| analog31 wrote:
| Great idea for an A/B test.
 
  | Karawebnetwork wrote:
  | At that point you'd be better served using generated humans
  | https://www.unrealengine.com/en-US/digital-humans
 
    | IncRnd wrote:
    | I approach the Internet as - you are all digital humans.
    | You've passed, but not all digital humans have passed the
    | Turing Test.
 
  | goldcd wrote:
  | Why just A/B?
  | 
  | Could generate trees of filters applied to your content, with a
  | separate channel output on each leaf.
  | 
  | Breed the filters that work, kill off the ones that don't get
  | the clicks. SEO for your appearance.
 
| 01100011 wrote:
| This is awesome. Just imagine how many radio stars wouldn't have
| been killed by video if this were around in the 80s.
| 
| Seriously, the world is full of talented performers, but they
| lack the look or image that the entertainment industry demands. I
| look forward to seeing how this progresses.
 
| yosito wrote:
| The only Instagram influencers I follow are people I know in real
| life. So I know that the people are real. But even then, the
| content they post is often framed in an unrealistic way and
| sometimes outright fake or edited. I know this because I've
| traveled with them, and seen the real side of all of the same
| things that they post about.
| 
| I can understand why people find Instagram influencers
| entertaining, especially the ones that appear to be attractive
| women. It's obviously entertaining enough that it's a realistic
| career option for many attractive women. But to me, believing
| that what you see on Instagram is real life is like someone in
| the 90s believing that tabloid newspapers at grocery store
| checkout aisles were real life. We should all know better.
 
| wayanon wrote:
| I hope there's a young female Japanese biker using a 50-year-old
| man's face on their instagram posts.
 
| [deleted]
 
| RocketOne wrote:
| So, essentially he catfished 16,000 followers.
 
| berniemadoff69 wrote:
| loud auto-playing audio as soon as you open the site
 
| rantwasp wrote:
| i am not even mad. this is amazing. now i'm gonna follow the
| dude. deal with it :))
 
| bahmboo wrote:
| 50? Sure bro :) another level of fun.
 
| keenreed wrote:
| This is just plain transphobia.
| 
| Person used filters and makeup to make themselfs look better and
| younger. This never ever happened before! OMG, call the
| police!!!!!
 
  | jessa0 wrote:
  | Exactly. How is this any different than any Instagram filter
  | that many influencers of any gender use to make themselves look
  | younger?
  | 
  | I think this was only a news story in Japan because feminism /
  | LGBTQ rights in Japan have a long way to go before people feel
  | comfortable being themselves in public.
 
  | blitz_skull wrote:
  | How is this transphobia?
 
    | keenreed wrote:
    | Because it does not make HN frontpage when "normal" woman
    | uses Instagram filters.
 
    | Pfhreak wrote:
    | Genuine attempt to answer: It's seen as humorous or weird
    | that a man would want to appear to be a young woman. It's
    | unclear in this case whether the person being photographed is
    | trans.
    | 
    | This article is not a tech demo or deep dive, it's gawking at
    | a man "pretending" to be a woman. It reinforces the idea that
    | trans women are just men "pretending" to be women.
    | 
    | It's not too many steps removed from something like Ace
    | Ventura, which went out of its way to explicitly frame trans
    | women as "gross". Yes, over time media has gotten a little
    | less explicit about this, but there's definitely a long tail
    | of media that's like, "Look at this weird trans/trans-
    | adjacent person over here..."
 
      | keenreed wrote:
      | I already made an answer, but it got flagged. Problem is
      | the double standard.
      | 
      | If 50 year old woman presents herself younger, it is not
      | big deal. We see it every day in celebrity magazines.
      | 
      | So this person presenting themselves under different
      | gender, is the only reason people talk about it.
 
      | JSavageOne wrote:
      | Are you serious? This man used an app to digitally
      | transform his face into someone entirely different.
      | Equating the reaction to this as trans-phobia is probably
      | the single dumbest thing I've read on HN. If I use a filter
      | to make myself look like a dog, am I offending people who
      | identify as dogs? The lengths certain people go to whine
      | and cry victim about everything is really sad.
 
      | marknutter wrote:
      | I think the number of people out there who see this and
      | relate it to trans people is vanishingly small.
 
        | Pfhreak wrote:
        | Is that due to education? Lack of understanding of the
        | trans experience? Given that the number of trans people
        | out there is already fairly small (single digit
        | percentages), I wouldn't expect trans awareness to be
        | wide. Especially internationally.
 
        | blitz_skull wrote:
        | Well I'm never going to understand any mental state that
        | I don't explicitly live in. I don't understand why
        | someone flips their lid and murders someone, and no
        | amount of education changes that.
        | 
        | I don't understand how someone who wins the lottery
        | feels, and no amount of education will change that
        | either.
        | 
        | At some point we need to realize that it's not someone
        | else's job to validate whatever feelings and internal
        | shit that we got going on in our heads. At the end of the
        | day, it's not anyone else's job to "identify" with your
        | preferences, and if someone thinks that your sexual
        | preferences are gross, that's actually OKAY.
        | 
        | I think many people assume that everyone needs to be okay
        | with everyone else's preferences, but not only is that
        | totally unrealistic, but what does it accomplish? You're
        | not going to rid malice and evil from the world by
        | accepting everyone's preferences, so what are we trying
        | to solve by "educating" everyone about transgenderism?
 
        | keenreed wrote:
        | Yes, it is tiny tiny minority, and we can safely ignore
        | them...
 
      | blitz_skull wrote:
      | Umm.. Excuse my ignorance--but--my understanding was that a
      | trans woman IS just a man pretending to be a woman?
 
        | Pfhreak wrote:
        | English may not be your first language? I think you have
        | perhaps unintentionally said something _extremely_
        | offensive.
        | 
        | Trans women are women. Trans women were born men, but
        | they are not pretending.
 
| JoeAltmaier wrote:
| Maybe it's the power of suggestion, but the photos looked
| instantly fake to me.
| 
| In any case, it seems fair that a person represent their online
| image any way they like. Who's to say how this man 'identifies'?
| He does.
 
  | danShumway wrote:
  | Agreed, I just don't see the problem here.
  | 
  | Even from the perspective of, "he's just doing this to get more
  | clicks," who cares? I just don't see how it's a problem for him
  | to present himself however he wants to present himself.
  | 
  | At some point for some people "digital avatar" became a dirty
  | word, and I don't understand it. I don't think he owes anyone
  | online his real-world face. He doesn't owe them some kind of
  | disclaimer either. If people online are following him because
  | they think they have some kind of parasocial relationship to a
  | girl, that's a personal issue they should think about on their
  | end. And in any case, everyone online already has a persona
  | they project; I have a persona and a set of characteristics and
  | attitudes I project when I post on HN even though I don't hide
  | my real name or identity. Knowing me on HN is not the same
  | thing as knowing me in real life; if I'm allowed to do that,
  | why can't he?
  | 
  | So he extends that to his face. Maybe he(she) is a woman but
  | hasn't chosen to let people know yet. Maybe he's genderfluid in
  | different places. Or maybe he just wants to have a woman avatar
  | on social accounts for whatever reason. None of that is a
  | problem.
  | 
  | This is fine even though he seems to identify as a man outside
  | of the Internet; he doesn't have to identify as a woman to do
  | this. Unless he's running around doing something genuinely
  | harmful or trying to troll women, then let him choose how he
  | presents himself online regardless of whether or not it matches
  | his normal day-to-day gender identity.
  | 
  | "Getting more clicks on Instagram" isn't a horrible crime or
  | deception that we should be concerned about.
 
  | keenreed wrote:
  | Nobody cares about the fact pictures are fake. 90% of instagram
  | pictures are fake.
  | 
  | The only problem is he/she is not "real" woman. This person is
  | clearly presenting themselves under different gender, and here
  | is large number of people harassing them/her/him.
 
  | InitialLastName wrote:
  | There are some face-adjusting filters that make people
  | "prettier" on both instagram and snapchat that immediately make
  | them look like recognizable-looking aliens to me, but they're
  | common enough that I could see people missing that it's
  | actually a more extreme change in this case.
 
  | rchaud wrote:
  | If you're on IG and TikTok regularly, it might be harder to
  | tell. Pretty much everybody is using filters. Even heavy
  | filters that basically change how you look aren't a breach of
  | etiquette, since it's all 'just for fun'.
 
  | mkl95 wrote:
  | This goes to show how dangerous deep fakes can be when people
  | are willing to believe. Several people had called him out
  | already, and they had provided evidence, but thousands of
  | people still believed he was a young woman.
 
    | danShumway wrote:
    | It's only "dangerous" if being a young woman is somehow an
    | intrinsically important transactional part of following the
    | account -- if the followers feel like they're being defrauded
    | or something.
    | 
    | But honestly, the people who have that association or who
    | view following an account as some kind of relationship should
    | be taking a look inward about why the physical
    | characteristics of a biker are so important to them in the
    | first place. I don't feel a huge need to make it easier for
    | people to do something that I feel like they shouldn't be
    | doing in the first place.
    | 
    | Down that road lies the segment of the Internet that gets mad
    | when they find out a woman streamer is married because "she
    | should have been upfront about it." And I just don't want to
    | touch that part of the Internet with a 10 foot pole. I'm not
    | worried about their ability to form unhealthy, one-sided
    | relationships with people they've never met.
 
    | JoeAltmaier wrote:
    | So? That's the point. He is what he represents himself to be.
    | Not what we want him to be.
 
      | mkl95 wrote:
      | > The man reportedly said that nobody wants to see an
      | "uncle", and so, he turned himself into a "beautiful woman"
      | so that his photos would be popular.
      | 
      | He self identifies as a 50 year old man. He admits that he
      | just did it for attention near the end of the article.
 
        | luckylion wrote:
        | So? He wanted to make a point, or he wanted attention,
        | what did anyone lose by him pretending to be a young
        | woman and get attention?
        | 
        | Instagram biker chicks might be annoyed because he's a
        | competitor, but anyone else?
 
        | LanceH wrote:
        | I assume all the instagram biker chicks are no turning
        | off their filters and removing makeup, right?
 
        | soperj wrote:
        | He self identifies as a 50 year old man who identifies as
        | a young beautiful woman, not just as a 50 year old man.
 
        | jessa0 wrote:
        | I'm not going to assume anything about this person's
        | gender, but I think it's worth mentioning that the
        | Japanese government uses violence to erase transgender
        | existence [1], so it may not be a safe place to be non-
        | cisgender.
        | 
        | [1] https://apnews.com/article/9ef16f52e9b94b9a838b17a63c
        | 6c1e8d
 
        | mkl95 wrote:
        | Unfortunately, there are quite a few things Japan has
        | tried to erase through history, with varying degrees of
        | success. "Silence" is a pretty good novel that touches on
        | one of those things (beware of descriptions of torture /
        | extreme violence).
 
    | NikolaeVarius wrote:
    | Why does anyone care
 
  | ktm5j wrote:
  | Agreed. And honestly as a trans woman I hate seeing this kind
  | of thing. The only reason people are paying attention to this
  | is that society has turned the idea of men (ie assigned male at
  | birth) identifying or representing themselves as women into a
  | joke. The amount of random strangers who laugh at me on a daily
  | basis is absolutely disheartening, it's really an awful thing
  | to have to deal with (same with being threatened, assaulted,
  | denied service which I have no legal protection against, not
  | being able to use public restrooms)...
  | 
  | If you're interested Netflix has a wonderful documentary called
  | Disclosure [0] about the media's portrayal of trans people,
  | women in particular. I highly recommend!
  | 
  | 0 - https://www.imdb.com/title/tt8637504/
 
    | marknutter wrote:
    | Wouldn't stuff like this make it less likely for people to be
    | shocked by gender nonconforming folks?
 
      | danShumway wrote:
      | I don't really buy that these stories help. The article
      | plays this off as a surprising, weird event that people
      | should be surprised by.
      | 
      | And while I'm assuming the person in question identifies as
      | a man based on what he says, he(she) might not, and might
      | just be in the closet saying the right things because he
      | knows the environment he lives in. If that's the case, the
      | article might even be harmful since it reinforces that this
      | is a persona and never even touches on the idea that it
      | might be a representation of his(her) actual gender
      | identity.
      | 
      | But in either case, the big thing to me is that the article
      | is harmful because it makes it everyone else's business. It
      | creates this world where people are expected to validate
      | that avatars online match physical bodies. Another way of
      | looking at the question of whether or not this person is in
      | the closet is that none of us know this person in real
      | life, and it's kind of messed up that we're jumping behind
      | the veil he put up so that we can validate whether or not
      | he's transgender or nonbinary or what.
      | 
      | He doesn't owe us any of that. He doesn't owe us coming out
      | of the closet, or staying in the closet, or explaining
      | whether or not there is a closet, or justifying what he's
      | doing. Even in the real world when we see nonbinary people,
      | we're not owed some kind of explanation of their entire
      | world; not unless that's something they want to share. So
      | the article turns something that should be a personal
      | decision into a curiosity that needs to be explained, to
      | the point where the media actually tracked this person down
      | for comment rather than just leaving him alone.
      | 
      | An article that talked to someone like this and
      | (consensually) explored his motivations on his terms might
      | be normalizing, but to me this comes off as the opposite --
      | it comes off as reinforcing that people should be shocked
      | by gender fluidity.
 
      | ktm5j wrote:
      | There's nothing in this article that talks about gender non
      | conforming people an the issues that affect us.. unless I'm
      | missing something. People who aren't already educated are
      | just going to have a laugh and leave with the same
      | preconceived notions that they came in with. This person is
      | being portrayed as someone who is misrepresenting
      | themselves, not someone who identifies as female, and in
      | fact that's what he says he's doing.
 
  | gowld wrote:
  | Everyone big on instagram is fake. But people assume it's large
  | asymmetric women faking, not men.
 
| mosselman wrote:
| The discussion here is a lot about 'deep fakes' and where will we
| be if we can't distinguish fake from real, but this is so
| obviously fake that I fear we might not care at all.
| 
| Even if it were a real young woman, why would anyone look at
| those obviously fake images? It is like someone from the 90s used
| paint to paste a random image on some random biker's head.
| 
| Also, why go through the trouble of having that hair and a real
| bike to begin with if the audience's sense for what is real is so
| low? You might as well take random images of empty parking lots
| and copy paste random bikes with random bodies and a young
| Japanese woman's face on them and it would look the same or
| better.
 
  | soared wrote:
  | They look convincing enough to me. And if I saw one while
  | scrolling Instagram, where I see ~3 images a second I
  | definitely wouldn't notice.
 
| gcheong wrote:
| My cynical take on this is that eventually ageism in tech won't
| be a thing with the combination of wfh and everyone being a young
| 20 something tech person online.
 
  | zabardasth wrote:
  | Why not pseudoanonymous / anonymous identities that work
  | together on a decentralized platform like Urbit? The
  | corporation is obsolete. DAOs will be the future.
 
| [deleted]
 
| cambalache wrote:
| There is a closing window of opportunity to make bank creating
| machine-learning generated girls and a farm of onlyfans accounts.
| Plenty of young (and not-so-young) men are paying to simulate
| even the slightest semblance of a relationship with a member of
| the opposite sex. In 10 years or so when distinguishing fake from
| real will be almost impossible expect the value of those accounts
| to plummet and a return to more ancient forms of transacting
| beauty and sex for money.
 
| puchatek wrote:
| This meaning of "uncle" should make it into mainstream english.
 
| dinglefairy wrote:
| I'd hit it
 
| bitwize wrote:
| Ah, Japan, where even middle-aged men want to be cute girls. I'm
| reminded of a few years ago when a popular "female" Vtuber let
| his motion capture software slip and accidentally revealed his
| face as that of a middle-aged otaku. Since then I guess there's
| been an acceptance of kayfabe among Vtuber stans.
 
  | Tade0 wrote:
  | Hololive seemed to have completely bypassed the problem by
  | creating completely fictional characters voiced by... someone.
 
| parliament32 wrote:
| It's worth noting that crypto-signed images have been around for
| a long time, just in specific professional cameras:
| https://www.dpreview.com/articles/3146736527/canondvke2
| 
| I imagine, as this sort of thing becomes more common, we'll see
| image "verification"/signing being a feature on all cameras, and
| eventually extend to mobile phone cameras for photos/videos as
| well.
 
  | bennyp101 wrote:
  | And once it has been shared, screen-shotted, re-shared,
  | compressed, phone taking a picture of it on a monitor etc
  | 
  | Sure, if you want to use it to try and prove you did
  | take/create an image of something, but it doesn't help prove
  | you /didn't/
 
  | yosito wrote:
  | I think there would be some potential for an photo-based
  | journalism platform that only publishes crypto-signed geo-
  | tagged photos. It seems that stock photos, and even fake photos
  | are the norm on mainstream news sites these days. It's very
  | hard to get verified photographic evidence of news stories.
 
  | CharlesW wrote:
  | That's cool, but it seems like building a trusted chain of
  | custody from source/capture, to editing (where lots of assets
  | will be combined/composited together), to distribution will be
  | tricky.
  | 
  | Plus, how does one guarantee that light hitting the camera
  | sensor hasn't already been manipulated?
 
  | de6u99er wrote:
  | IMO this would just help someone prove that a certain original
  | image was made with a specific camera in regards of IP and to
  | protect themselves at court against claims of having tampered
  | with an image.
  | 
  | What we see on the web are mostly resized and heavily
  | compressed images. Not sure how such a cryptographic signature
  | could work in such cases.
 
| cwkoss wrote:
| It seems like his motivation was primarily increased online
| engagement.
| 
| As human socialization occurs increasingly in digital spaces,
| will be interesting to see if there is a rise in trans people who
| only wish to transition using technology without wanting to
| change their own analog physical appearance.
| 
| Similarly, I wonder if there are remote workers who use filters
| like these to consistently present an idealized version of
| themselves professionally.
| 
| I predict within the next 20 years, having an avatar that is more
| attractive than your true physical form will become normalized.
| Perhaps some middle aged people will only present as their 20
| year old selves online. I'm sure transracial avatars will be a
| controversial issue.
| 
| Maybe I should short cosmetics and go long on GPU manufacturing.
 
  | tommoor wrote:
  | > Perhaps some middle aged people will only present as their 20
  | year old selves online.
  | 
  | Oh, this for sure is already happening. A lot of people's
  | profile pictures (for example on twitter) are frozen in time
  | some 10 years ago.
 
| nomdep wrote:
| At some point soon(ish), deep fakes like this are going to end
| the porn industry, including Only Fans, in its current form.
| 
| Is going to be replaced at by computer-rendered photos/videos,
| some voice actors and a group of interns answering the chat.
 
| SamBam wrote:
| What really worries me about the DeepFakes stuff is not so much
| the fakes -- I'm worried about that, but that's been written
| about to death -- but that now it adds plausible deniability to
| _anyone_ caught on camera doing anything.
| 
| If we had video footage of, say, a politician doing something
| clearly illegal on camera, then it's simply the word of the
| politician against the word of the source -- the latter of whom
| may need to remain anonymous.
| 
| That said... the other way around is still the more dangerous, I
| guess. If, say, a US adversary creates a great-looking video of
| the US president doing/saying something really heinous, that has
| the potential to inflame the world long before the truth can get
| its boots on.
 
  | keiferski wrote:
  | Personally I think this might be a good thing. The alternative
  | is a squeaky clean politician that has no character, mistakes,
  | or experiences.
  | 
  | > I guess. If, say, a US adversary creates a great-looking
  | video of the US president doing/saying something really
  | heinous, that has the potential to inflame the world long
  | before the truth can get its boots on.
  | 
  | By the time this becomes possible, it will be widespread
  | knowledge that deepfakes exist.
 
    | Majestic121 wrote:
    | Even with widespread knowledge that deepfakes exists, you can
    | still make credible videos of people that damages them.
    | 
    | For example, picture a video of Trump saying in private
    | committee 'I want to fuck that nigress'. That would be
    | extremely heinous, and probably be a fake, but can you be
    | 100% sure from a president that also said 'grab them by the
    | pussy' ?
    | 
    | The line between real and fake news is becoming more and more
    | tenuous.
 
      | [deleted]
 
    | SamBam wrote:
    | It's already possible. Look at the Tom Cruise deepfakes. It
    | just requires the power to get a great actor of similar
    | build, and lots of processing power, both of which are within
    | the reach of a state, easily.
    | 
    | And I don't think knowing the deepfakes exists will convince
    | everyone. Plenty of fake photos already get passed around on
    | Facebook and what-not, even though Photoshop has existed for
    | decades.
 
  | cyborgx7 wrote:
  | > it adds plausible deniability to anyone caught on camera
  | doing anything.
  | 
  | I see this concern brought up frequently but I don't really
  | think this is a big deal. In the grand scheme of things,
  | ubiquous availability of video cameras is a fairly new
  | development. Video cameras themself are a fairly new
  | development.
  | 
  | We had a functional society before video evidence and we will
  | have a functional society after video evidence.
  | 
  | There was a very short window of time in which we had somewhat
  | reliable video evidence but it is now coming to an end and we
  | will manage.
 
    | Blikkentrekker wrote:
    | Functional? perhaps, but I would say that if one peer into
    | history, what one finds is suspects convicted on evidence
    | that would seem flimsy by today's standard, and so will the
    | future look at us.
    | 
    | I would think that the number of false positive convictions
    | declines with the advancement of new technology, and that
    | this is perhaps a temporary setback.
    | 
    | There was a time before fingerprints and d.n.a. evidence as
    | well, both of which have been very helpful not only in
    | convicting the guilty, but in exonerating the innocent, and
    | if ever come the time that it be feasible and affordable for
    | a layman to plant fake d.n.a. evidence and fingerprints, that
    | would be quite a setback for criminal forensics.
 
    | koboll wrote:
    | I think it's even simpler -- liars attracting any degree of
    | press attention won't be able to get away with it.
    | 
    | "That picture was Photoshopped" doesn't work as a defense
    | because it's not too difficult for experts to tell a
    | Photoshop from a genuine image, nor to interview someone at
    | the scene of an alleged event and learn the truth.
    | 
    | The same will be true with deepfakes, only much more so,
    | because there are so many more ways to give away that it's a
    | deepfake. Video adds new dimensions of scrutiny like how well
    | the fake face tracks the head, matches lighting and
    | expression, etc. Deepfake detection is in its infancy but you
    | can bet it'll be even more accurate than Photoshop detection.
 
  | shpx wrote:
  | Lying is not a new phenomenon. Whether or not it's useful or
  | good is a philosophical question with many answers which don't
  | matter because if it becomes possible we will (have to) adjust
  | and there will always be some upside if you want to see it.
  | 
  | Today, lying with video is really expensive, but if in the
  | future everyone is able to do it and everyone knows that it's
  | possible then we're back to he-said-she-said, which is how
  | society has worked since the beginning, except the last 200-ish
  | years. I can easily lie and say I saw Bill Clinton murder
  | someone in 1990. Maybe in the future I'll be able to generate
  | fake video evidence of it just as easily as I typed out that
  | sentence. If everyone has a feel for how easy it is, then so
  | what?
  | 
  | The danger is in the transition, when lying using video is
  | affordable by a select few, and not everyone knows about it.
  | Then it's powerful. If you're worried about that then we need
  | to develop and teach this technology as quickly as possible. We
  | can also do something fun like collect a time capsule of
  | important videos before this becomes easy and timestamp it in a
  | verifiable way (by posting the hash to a blockchain or some
  | authority for example).
 
    | anigbrowl wrote:
    | Very good post. Another factor to consider is that a
    | technology can be powerful when everyone does know a bit
    | about it, but the perceptions of around it can be
    | manipulated.
    | 
    | To stick with your 'Bill Clinton murdered someone in 1990'
    | example, if you are Alex Jones and you say that then I will
    | be skeptical gien Alex Jones' serial unreliability. But if
    | you deepfake yourself to resemble a (hypothetical) real
    | person called Albert Johannsen who died in 1995, and
    | manipulate the video to look like old VHS, then the
    | authentic-seeming testimonial can be 'discovered' by someone
    | clearing out an attic or storage unit, and then merely
    | publicized by you-as-Alex Jones, who merely reports the claim
    | of the discover (actually a collaborator of course).
    | 
    | There is an endless variety of of applications, eg you have
    | really committed a crime and video exists, but you produce a
    | deepfake of yourself committing the same crime multiple
    | different ways or the like, such that everyone thinks You Did
    | It but nobody can agree about exactly how or to what extent
    | and you escape justice due to the ambiguity (albeit with
    | diminished future prospects).
 
  | GrumpyNl wrote:
  | The problem is much bigger, i can now use deep fake to present
  | myself in a very relaxed way with a lot of confidedence and
  | great facial expressions. Now i can deliver video presentations
  | like a champ, just improve myself. Its me and not me.
 
  | colechristensen wrote:
  | Would better cameras circumvent the issue?
  | 
  | Sure a deepfake is convincing on a low resolution compressed
  | video, but what about a 4k or 8k video where lens distortion
  | and fine details are everywhere? I don't have a lot of
  | confidence that facial pores could be convincingly simulated.
 
    | SamBam wrote:
    | But are most secret camera recordings using high-res cameras?
    | 
    | Let's say there was video recording of a politician in a
    | hotel in Russia, to pick a random example. We would already
    | expect it to be low-quality video even if it was real.
 
      | colechristensen wrote:
      | >Let's say there was video recording of a politician in a
      | hotel in Russia, to pick a random example. We would already
      | expect it to be low-quality video even if it was real.
      | 
      | But why? The cheap last-gen iPhone in my pocket can take 4k
      | videos, almost everybody has something like it in their
      | pockets. Quality is cheap and will continue spreading,
      | fuzzy video that looks like it was taken on a 90s camcorder
      | will itself seem suspicious.
 
    | ma2rten wrote:
    | Generating those low level feature is actually a much easier
    | problem. Here is an example I found using a google image
    | search for "upscaling":
    | 
    | https://copyrightimage.com/2018/05/09/better-image-
    | upscaling...
    | 
    | This is from 2018, which is an eternity for machine learning
    | research.
 
      | colechristensen wrote:
      | But those kinds of things also could reveal the fraud -
      | adding a blemish where the real person doesn't have one,
      | features that move around frame by frame in a video. The
      | difference is things which look believable might be details
      | which are trivially verifiably false - sure you can
      | simulate my face and my voice, but can you accurately
      | simulate every pore on my nose.
      | 
      | Here's a random example:
      | 
      | https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/6619284
      | 
      | They can detect a persons pulse from tiny variations in
      | head movement, I'd like to see a deepfake simulate that!
      | And it's not about this one thing, I'm sure you could
      | design against these tiny measurements one by one... the
      | key is that there are a _lot_ of them and a deepfake is
      | going to have to simulate an enormous amount of data in
      | order to pass what will become trivial tests for realism.
      | This is made a much easier weapon against deepfakes when
      | you have progressively better videos.
 
  | cwkoss wrote:
  | "News" organizations already edit video to maximize emotional
  | impact to viewers, often in misleading ways.
  | 
  | I don't see this as a paradigm shift as much as a continued
  | slide down the slippery slope of normalized propaganda.
 
  | fossuser wrote:
  | I used to be more worried about this, but one of the things
  | Trump proved is you can have unquestionably authentic video
  | evidence of lies and many people won't care.
  | 
  | The people that care about figuring out the truth and critical
  | thinking will probably still figure it out.
  | 
  | Others will believe crazy things for stupid tribal reasons
  | despite contrary evidence.
 
  | kukx wrote:
  | "If, say, a US adversary creates a great-looking video of the
  | US president doing/saying something really heinous (...)" Did
  | we not see enough fake stories about US presidents already? The
  | DeepFakes are not really needed to falsely accuse a politician,
  | or to wash away the compromising material. The media can use
  | anonymous sources to claim anything bad about any public figure
  | without consequences. Also, they can ignore and diminish any
  | compromising material, effectively shielding the subject. It is
  | all about who controls the media and subsequently the
  | narrative. DeepFake may or may not be used in court though.
 
  | [deleted]
 
  | [deleted]
 
  | joe_the_user wrote:
  | _If we had video footage of, say, a politician doing something
  | clearly illegal on camera, then it 's simply the word of the
  | politician against the word of the source -- the latter of whom
  | may need to remain anonymous._
  | 
  | -- How often are politicians caught on camera doing illegal
  | things now? I don't recall this happening very often. The bad
  | behavior on camera I remember from way bad when ("Abscam") was
  | an FBI entrapment scheme so you have more than just the video
  | as testament.
  | 
  | -- The most common "guilty by camera" situation in recent years
  | have been cops and when a scene from an event where other facts
  | are known gets filmed, you need far more than face manipulation
  | to make a fake that's going to be plausible.
 
  | not2b wrote:
  | How will the adversary get the deep fake into circulation? If
  | it suddenly appears on social media from some sketchy account,
  | and in the meantime the White House press pool points out that
  | they were with the President in a completely different place,
  | it will blow up. And it would have to be technically perfect or
  | it would fall apart on analysis.
 
  | heavyset_go wrote:
  | Any evidence relied on in court needs a chain of custody, and
  | pictures and videos are no different. It's why screenshots are
  | generally inadmissible in court: anyone could have edited them.
 
  | dheera wrote:
  | The plausible deniability of camera footage always existed,
  | even in the film days. There are lots of tricks to fake things
  | on camera. Neural networks do make it much easier, but it's not
  | new.
  | 
  | That said though, make forging evidence a crime of the utmost
  | seriousness. Also, /more/ cameras always makes deepfaking
  | harder.
 
  | simion314 wrote:
  | There are old examples with photos including newspapers/TV that
  | used faked images, so it not something new. If there is a big
  | punishment for intentionally faking videos and presenting them
  | as true similar like for official documents or impersonating
  | officials then this technology would be used a lot less in the
  | countries where this laws apply.
 
    | pdpi wrote:
    | Convincingly faking photos was, until recently, pretty damn
    | hard.
    | 
    | This is currently possible by just using a screenshot from a
    | game and an app from the AppStore:
    | https://twitter.com/nillxzero/status/1369452664979943427
 
      | shard wrote:
      | I think people's ability to detect fake photos have
      | increased over the years. Consider the Cottingley Fairies
      | photos (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cottingley_Fairies),
      | to my modern eyes, the fairies are unmistakably fake: the
      | lighting is wrong, the resolution is wrong, the texture is
      | wrong. However there were people who were convinced that
      | these were real photos of fairies back then.
 
      | [deleted]
 
    | noxer wrote:
    | But its not about evidence. Its about shifting public
    | opinion. There is and most probably never will be a law that
    | prevents people from sharing/liking/commenting or otherwise
    | trigger the algorithms to spread something based on the fact
    | that it is fake. Media also fakes stuff by simply not
    | providing context. It need no "active" image manipulation.
    | cutting and embedding it into other content works fine since
    | years and apparently there is very very little that can
    | legally be done against this. The fact that the original is
    | out there is also rather meaningless. take for example the
    | very popular "very fine people on both sides" quote, nothing
    | stops you or me to listen to the full conversation. But even
    | today from random people on the street who recognizes the
    | quote probably 50% do not know the real context. Most
    | probably because they simply dont care enough. They
    | involuntary heard the quote but they will not involuntary
    | hear the context, because one goes viral the other does not.
 
      | simion314 wrote:
      | I was thinking at some tabloids, sure some anonymous can
      | post fake stuff but if a journalists creates the fake
      | image/video or documents then there should be more
      | consequences. Also I am not from US so I am not targeting a
      | specific camp, when I was watching news (I stopped years
      | ago_ a lot of energy was spent on discussing insinuations,
      | fake stuff or trivial things. I realized that politicians
      | know how to throw the media some delicious bones to keep
      | them busy with whatever they want.
 
        | noxer wrote:
        | Its called "accountability", something mainstream
        | journalism doesn't seem to have in most places. Its just
        | a fact that biased "news" get more clicks and thus more
        | money. Its hard to define when "faking" starts and where
        | its is just non-neutral reporting.
 
  | brightball wrote:
  | This isn't much different than the problem we've had with
  | internet for many years, from inflammatory headlines with no
  | substance in the story on down.
  | 
  | "A lie can travel half way around the world while the truth is
  | putting on its shoes." - Mark Twain
 
    | 11thEarlOfMar wrote:
    | >pedant alert<
    | 
    | "...there exists a family of expressions contrasting the
    | dissemination of lies and truths, and these adages have been
    | evolving for more than 300 years. Jonathan Swift can properly
    | be credited with the statement he wrote in 1710. Charles
    | Haddon Spurgeon popularized the version he employed in a
    | sermon in 1855, but he did not craft it. At this time, _there
    | is no substantive support for assigning the saying to Mark
    | Twain or Winston Churchill_. " [0]
    | 
    | [0] https://quoteinvestigator.com/2014/07/13/truth/
 
      | Nursie wrote:
      | I like to look further into the past for ruminations that,
      | while not as concise, explore the same territory. A passage
      | from the Aeneid says -
      | 
      | Rumour the swiftest of all evils. Speed lends her strength,
      | and she winds vigour as she goes; small at first through
      | fear, soon she mounts up to heaven, and walks the ground
      | with head hidden in the clouds. Mother Earth, provoked to
      | anger against the gods, brought her forth last, they, say
      | as sister to Coeus and Enceladus, swift of foot and fleet
      | of wing, a monster awful and huge, who for the many
      | feathers in her body has as many watchful eyes beneath -
      | wondrous to tell - as many tongues, as many sounding
      | mouths, as many pricked-up ears. By night, midway between
      | heaven and earth, she flies through the gloom, screeching,
      | and droops not her eyes in sweet sleep; by day she sits on
      | guard on high rooftop or lofty turrets, and afrights great
      | cities, clinging to the false and the wrong, yet heralding
      | truth.
 
  | brippalcharrid wrote:
  | It also has the potential to devalue real evidence in the form
  | of existing compromising material unless people have done
  | things like adding cryptographic hashes to immutable public
  | records with attestations.
 
  | ballenf wrote:
  | So we'll return to how guilt or provenance were determined for
  | thousands of years. We've only had "reliable" non-human
  | witnesses for a few decades.
  | 
  | And even with deep fakes, we'll still have fingerprints, DNA,
  | phone and car tracking, facial ID systems in public places,
  | etc.
 
  | jillesvangurp wrote:
  | It just pressures us to come up with ways to prove
  | authenticity. Those ways definitely exist but are not common
  | yet and we have courts and governments full of people with a
  | poor grasp on technology. But basically it calls for chains of
  | evidence that are cryptographically tamper proof. That's not a
  | thing right now. But it's going to become a hard requirement
  | when evidence can be fabricated, falsified, etc. It's also the
  | key to countering fake news and a few other things.
  | 
  | People accepting everything at face value is not going to stay
  | a thing when world+dog is going to abuse their new powers. Only
  | fools would believe what they see after they've been fooled a
  | few times and suffered the consequences.
  | 
  | Short term it's going to be a mess, but long term it's a good
  | thing for us to figure this out and move on.
 
    | osmarks wrote:
    | I don't see how you can cryptographically validate much more
    | than "this was validated by this source before this time",
    | which doesn't seem to solve the problem stated by the parent
    | at all.
 
      | jillesvangurp wrote:
      | If you have cameras that sign their video feed with some
      | id; editing software where an editor signs off on any
      | edits, peopling handling/validating the content adding
      | their signatures, etc. you build a chain of digitally
      | signed content based evidence that you can follow all the
      | way back to the original recording.
      | 
      | Then you can get people into court testifying whether they
      | used a given piece of equipment to film something, edit
      | something, etc. and you can guarantee that you are watching
      | the exact output of that chain of recordings, edits, etc.
      | 
      | As I said, not a thing right now. But also not that
      | technically hard to build. Right now we're just trusting
      | witnesses that might be lying through their teeth without
      | us knowing or being able to prove otherwise. Once we had
      | such capability; anything else would be inadmissible in a
      | court and no self respecting journalist would touch
      | equipment without this capability. Why would they?
      | 
      | A deep fake would look plausible but lack this chain of
      | evidence.
 
        | osmarks wrote:
        | This doesn't seem significantly better than just having
        | the organization providing a video sign it as
        | "authentically theirs", in cases where that's possible;
        | if you mean some sort of thing where editing software and
        | cameras will sign things as "not tampered with", then
        | this is effectively a DRM system and subject to the
        | excitingly wide range of issues affecting that. This
        | would not work for many situations, particularly the ones
        | SamBam describes (not least due to the anonymity thing),
        | as it is unlikely that there will conveniently be someone
        | there with chain-of-trust-capable recording equipment and
        | software.
 
      | AdamN wrote:
      | It's turtles all the way down :-)
 
      | osmarks wrote:
      | Maybe you could have some DRMish thing where the camera
      | signs it with a "secret" key, but this would be terrible
      | for various reasons and also likely broken very fast.
 
        | pxue wrote:
        | I don't think so. You can cryptographically sign anything
        | much like how SSL works now. You'll have to rely on
        | certificate authorities to assign these certs, but it
        | works.
        | 
        | Videos should be cryptographically signed, and verified
        | once online. You can spoof certs but you can't really
        | fake the cert authority
 
        | osmarks wrote:
        | That's what I meant by "validated by this source". But
        | unlike with CAs, where they're (meant to) just base
        | issuance on the simple objectively testable criterion of
        | whether you control the domain in question, an external
        | authority cannot easily know whether a video represents
        | real events, whatever that means.
 
        | kube-system wrote:
        | But, signing some data with a certificate only indicates
        | that a key belongs to a particular name. It doesn't tell
        | you whether the person or organization with that name is
        | trustworthy.
 
        | [deleted]
 
      | thinkloop wrote:
      | If you authenticate the video comes from a credible
      | unrelated source, that would be different than if it came
      | from a mysterious unknown source. Additionally if you have
      | the chain of trust, you can interrogate every step manually
      | for credibility and consistency.
 
        | osmarks wrote:
        | Which is somewhat helpful, but also just pushes the
        | validation work off onto large entities of some kind.
 
        | notriddle wrote:
        | Yes, of course.
        | 
        | The value of it is that the legwork only has to be done
        | once, instead of requiring everyone to independently do
        | it (which would basically turn every accusation of crime
        | into a DDoS against the accused).
 
      | gostsamo wrote:
      | Maybe a service or a public blockchain where you send a
      | hash of a digital artefact which is signed with a time
      | constrained key. The signed hash is attached to the digital
      | artefact and you can check the hash on the blockchain or on
      | the api's service.
      | 
      | A blockchain is more wasteful, but a service requires a
      | leap of faith in the provider.
 
        | osmarks wrote:
        | This is still just a way to validate when something
        | existed, isn't it?
 
    | simias wrote:
    | This is not a technical problem IMO. You can't
    | cryptographically sign reality. There's always the analog
    | hole[1].
    | 
    | It's a problem of trust within society. Look at many very
    | mainstream conspiracy theories these days: there's ample
    | proof that it's not true, but people want to believe so
    | they'll believe.
    | 
    | You can't fix the lack of trust in society with cryptography.
    | 
    | I just went on a constructionist website I sometimes lurk
    | when I'm bored, literally the first story I find is titled
    | `The Age of "Credentialism" and "Experts" is over. Every
    | Single Institution works against your interests'. You can't
    | fix this mindset with maths.
    | 
    | Video is cryptographically signed? But what about the secret
    | computers in the Pentagon's basement that run on Quantum CPUs
    | using ancient alien technology found in the pyramids? They
    | can certainly break ECC. Here, watch this Youtube video...
    | 
    | [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Analog_hole
 
      | intrasight wrote:
      | What is this analog hole of which you speak? Only nature
      | delivers analog ;)
      | 
      | But nature doesn't create deep fakes - though not as the
      | term is being used here. I would argue that nature has been
      | making deep fakes for millions of years.
      | 
      | Anything that is created by CNN Deep Fake tech is delivered
      | via computer - either using printer or with some sort of
      | screen screen. Let's eliminate printers as nobody uses them
      | anymore. What about screens? I smell a business
      | opportunity.
 
      | brundolf wrote:
      | Seconding this. The fracture at the heart of our society is
      | not rooted in unintelligence, or lack of education or
      | access to facts. It's rooted in a lack of trust. The most
      | rigorous science is only as good as the trust people place
      | in those performing it (and the entire chain of reporting
      | from there to its reception). Those links are being/have
      | been broken. No amount of added rigor will fix that. I
      | don't know what will.
 
        | Dracophoenix wrote:
        | I'd argue it's the opposite. We've relied too much on
        | trust and promises and not enough on rigor and exactness.
        | Most people aren't given facts, constraints and
        | limitations until it's too late, if ever. What they're
        | given are viewpoints with selective evidence and glaring
        | omissions. It's remained a unsolved since the beginning
        | of humanity. A solution to this problem is a rigorous
        | self-proving system that wouldn't need one to convince
        | another of the facts.
 
        | simias wrote:
        | I don't want to live in a trustless society. What you
        | describe sounds like a totalitarian dystopia to me.
        | 
        | I want escape hatches. I want plausible deniability.
        | Facts in a vacuum are useless and can be used to propel
        | all sorts of narratives. Facts without framing and
        | contextualization aren't worth much. You can manipulate
        | easily without technically lying, just by cherry picking
        | facts that suit your agenda.
        | 
        | You need some amount of trust and solidarity if you want
        | to live in a healthy society.
 
        | edbob wrote:
        | > Those links are being/have been broken. No amount of
        | added rigor will fix that. I don't know what will.
        | 
        | The institutions could start telling the truth once in a
        | while. Statements like "27 police officers injured during
        | largely peaceful anti-racism protests in London" (BBC)
        | and "Fiery but mostly peaceful protests" (CNN) with the
        | city burning down in the background account for why trust
        | in media is rapidly approaching zero. It makes it clear
        | that the violence and devastation is just a curiosity to
        | the upper-class elites that control these institutions,
        | but normal people who actually have to live with
        | aftermath _are not amused_.
        | 
        | Fauci is another huge contributor. First don't wear
        | masks, they can actually hurt. Then you have to wear
        | masks. Now wear two or three! But earlier he was
        | ridiculing people who wore multiple masks. Along with all
        | the knowingly false statements about how long lockdowns
        | would last. Clearly Fauci should not be allowed to speak
        | in public, but unfortunately the blast radius of his
        | mistakes extends beyond him to the government and media
        | institutions that defend him and amplified his
        | misinformation.
 
        | anigbrowl wrote:
        | _with the city burning down in the background_
        | 
        | No exaggeration there *_*
        | 
        | I get that you're complaining about 'liberal' media
        | downplaying disorderly and often dangerous events such as
        | riots to suit a political agenda, but the converse is
        | also true; if one relies on 'conservative' media then
        | you'd think many major American cities are post-
        | apocalyptic smoking holes in the ground.
 
      | gnramires wrote:
      | You can't sign reality, but people can sign statements.
      | 
      | If you see a video at a date D1 where you say Statement1,
      | and cryptographically sign it with your key K, then at a
      | later date someone can verify that at least you said you've
      | watched an backed your statement.
      | 
      | In a way all of security relies on the physical safety of
      | some kind of secret data. So you have the deniability of
      | key compromise in any case.
      | 
      | If everything a president states publicly is signed with
      | his key Kp, then:
      | 
      | 1) If something controversial is published _without
      | signature_ , the president can say it's not standard
      | procedure and a plausible forgery;
      | 
      | 2) If the president publishes officially without a
      | signature, the public can demand one so there's no later
      | equivocation;
      | 
      | 3) Anything that has been said can be verified in the
      | future by checking the presidential signature.
      | 
      | In this case, the worst case is really a compromised key
      | (although key scheduling should mitigate it), but most
      | forgery cases of statements (and potentially documents,
      | mandates, etc.) are eliminated.
      | 
      | In practice, it would be difficult to get your public
      | figures to sign everything they say (and difficult to get
      | them to accept this kind of potential auto-incrimination
      | for the public good).
 
        | cwkoss wrote:
        | That doesn't work for adversarial recordings. No one will
        | sign an embarrassing or damning video of themselves, and
        | those are the cases where authenticity is the most
        | important.
        | 
        | Your solution is technologically cool, but I think the
        | current system of "was this published by a domain
        | controlled by the office of the press secretary" is
        | probably accomplishing this case well enough.
 
        | greiskul wrote:
        | For adversarial recordings, I wonder if we could have a
        | camera that instantly uploads a timestamp and hash of
        | each video taken to a blockchain. This way, we could have
        | videos that we know for a fact were recorded at the
        | latest at a certain time. It would still be vulnerable
        | for a fake video to be post dated, but never pre dated.
 
      | joe_the_user wrote:
      | _This is not a technical problem IMO. You can 't
      | cryptographically sign reality. There's always the analog
      | hole_
      | 
      | Reality has a pretty strong "hash" naturally built in. Even
      | manipulated picture carries a huge amount of information
      | that isn't changed or isn't changed as much as one thinks.
      | 
      | The manipulated pictures the motorcyclist uploaded still
      | would give someone a good idea where and even when they
      | were taken. That doesn't matter here but if you're making a
      | more detailed argument, it's harder.
      | 
      | Just consider, "computer forensics" is a thing even though
      | any single bit on the computer can be overwritten and
      | "faked".
 
        | kodah wrote:
        | Your theory is basically the theory behind Minority
        | Report.
 
      | deckard1 wrote:
      | I was recently watching The Brainwashing of My Dad. Rush
      | Limbaugh made millions of dollars selling lies to the
      | American public. At one point there is a video clip of him
      | admitting that the truth of what he is saying on radio is
      | irrelevant. It doesn't matter to him. He lays out the
      | recipe for generating fear and uncertainty. Basically, if
      | you say something loud enough and with enough confidence
      | _no one_ will stand in your way. Because, as fact checkers
      | know, it takes considerable time to research a bullshit
      | claim. By the time the research is done and published, the
      | bullshitter has moved on and told an additional 20 lies. He
      | also makes a statistical argument for how his business
      | works. He doesn 't need to hook every listener. But he does
      | know that _enough_ people will fall for his shtick.
      | 
      | The troubling aspect is that all of this bullshit is
      | blending together. My dad watched Fox News. Now he's hooked
      | on Youtube conspiracy garbage. I'd be terrified if he ever
      | became a QAnon type. We're dealing with literal internet
      | cults becoming a mainstream phenomenon. We're nowhere near
      | equipped for the mess we, the technologists, have made. You
      | have Alex Jones out there claiming that an _elementary
      | school_ shooting didn 't happen. You think these guys are
      | going to trust encryption? Or anything that their Youtube
      | priest tells them is a "hoax"?
      | 
      | Education would be the answer. But education is at war with
      | engagement algorithms and attention spans.
 
        | knowaveragejoe wrote:
        | This is a technique known as the Firehose of Falsehood:
        | 
        | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Firehose_of_falsehood
        | 
        | The goal is not necessarily to convince people of a
        | particular claim, it's to levy so many claims and use the
        | scrambling of media acting in good faith to vet those
        | claims as an overloading mechanism to get regular people
        | to tune out entirely.
 
        | anigbrowl wrote:
        | Also known as 'flooding the zone'. Like many political
        | tropes, this originates in team sports which in turn is
        | an abstraction of war. It's an awful lot easier to
        | understand the media landscape if you consider it as
        | cultural warfare with ideas and tropes as territory,
        | although this is hard to visualize in spatial terms.
        | 
        | The answer to this (and the accompanying tribalism that
        | pervades public discourse nowadays) is often said to be
        | education and critical thinking, but that requires years
        | of investment and often-unwelcome external discipline to
        | internalize and actuate; it's a statement of what we
        | would like to have instead rather than an actionable
        | solution to its own absence.
        | 
        | Friendly emotional persuasion can work better as a de-
        | escalation-bridging tactic, as suggested here:
        | https://dr-gleb-tsipursky.medium.com/how-to-talk-to-a-
        | scienc...
        | 
        | This is also helpful for gathering information to
        | understand the dynamics and attractiveness of false
        | information, even if no changing of mind can occur; think
        | of it as the difference between carefully dismantling an
        | unexploded munition in order to figure out how it works
        | vs. a controlled explosion to minimize future risk at the
        | expense of continued vulnerability.
        | 
        | Where conflict is unavoidable or deliberately fomented
        | (eg people arguing in bad faith rather than sincerely
        | believing falsehoods), an overtly hostile response
        | imposes a cost on the aggressor, and when consistently
        | and predictably applied it effectively alters the payoff
        | matrix in an adversarial game:
        | https://snap.stanford.edu/conflict/
        | 
        | Many people are aware of Mutual Assured Destruction as a
        | kind of nuclear diplomacy, where you are deterred from
        | nuking me because I've made it very clear that if you do
        | I will take you down with me, leading to a heavily armed
        | but uneasy peace. There are also lesser-known concepts
        | like Power Transition Theory (about how wars originate
        | from weaker countries challenging stronger ones) and
        | nowadays scholars of international relations tend to
        | adhere to Hegemonic Stability Theory (one very powerful
        | country plays Teacher/cop) or World System Theory (every
        | dog has its day). Developing familiarity with the broad
        | concepts of interstate conflict (without going too deep
        | down any intellectual rabbit hole) can be helpful in
        | modeling smaller scale political conflicts, divisions in
        | civil society etc.
 
    | boomboomsubban wrote:
    | >People accepting everything at face value is not going to
    | stay a thing when world+dog is going to abuse their new
    | powers. Only fools would believe what they see after they've
    | been fooled a few times and suffered the consequences
    | 
    | This seems overly optimistic, and requires people to
    | themselves suffer unambiguously from the doctored evidence.
    | 
    | On an individual level, regular discovery of police and
    | prosecutorial has not led widespread reform in those areas.
    | And on a larger scale, even after things like the Gulf of
    | Tonkin people largely accepted claims of WMD's in Iraq.
 
    | pjc50 wrote:
    | There are people who still claim in public to believe that
    | the US election was stolen.
    | 
    | Acceptance of evidence is socially constructed. If it's
    | politically convenient to go along with the beliefs of your
    | faction, and you're rewarded for saying increasingly
    | ludicrous things in public, then people are going to do it.
 
    | guerrilla wrote:
    | Isn't this what Adobe is trying to do? [1] It was posted on
    | HN a few times but never started a discussion that I saw.
    | Personally, I'm scared of it although I can't put my finger
    | on why.
    | 
    | 1. https://blog.adobe.com/en/publish/2019/11/04/content-
    | authent...
 
    | bogwog wrote:
    | > But basically it calls for chains of evidence that are
    | cryptographically tamper proof
    | 
    | JusticeCoin ICO when??
 
      | retrac wrote:
      | You jest, but distributed publicly verifiable proof that a
      | certain piece of information existed, and was
      | cryptographically signed at a certain date and time, and
      | has not since been modified, is basically the only thing
      | blockchains are actually useful for. And that sounds much
      | like what we need here.
 
      | jillesvangurp wrote:
      | Just because some opportunists did a few ICOs does not mean
      | all crypto is bad. Without crypto there would be no online
      | banking, or any form of digital security, secure logins,
      | etc. Crypto is a useful tool. Blockchains are a tool. And
      | so are digital signatures. If you combine those tools, you
      | can do some useful things like creating tamper proof audit
      | logs documenting where information came from all the way
      | from the sensor to your eyeballs. It's just a chain of
      | digital signatures.
      | 
      | I tried hard to avoid using the word block chain in the
      | original comment to avoid exactly this kind of knee jerk
      | response. But yes, kind of an obvious tool to use to record
      | chains of evidence in a tamper proof way. Glad you jumped
      | to that conclusion as well.
      | 
      | Contrary to the popular belief, not every block chain based
      | thing has to be an investment scam. I don't think we need a
      | separate coin for this; just a shared repository of truth
      | and fact with full auditing. Blockchains are kind of
      | designed to be that. If you know a better way, please
      | provide it.
      | 
      | And just to pre-empt it, obviously my preferred flavor of
      | block chain for this would be miner free proof of stake
      | rather than proof of work.
 
    | RhodoGSA wrote:
    | Deid solves this. Couple of projects are building this on
    | various blockchains.
 
  | kawera wrote:
  | Related:
  | 
  | Chinese deepfakes are going viral, and Beijing is freaking out
  | 
  | https://www.protocol.com/china/chinese-deepfakes-regulators-...
 
  | aeternum wrote:
  | I wouldn't worry about it too much. Having so much on video in
  | the first place is a pretty recent phenomenon. 30 years ago,
  | politicians had a very low chance of being caught on camera at
  | all.
 
    | Blikkentrekker wrote:
    | It comes to min that I know of few politica scandals that
    | were revealed by anyone caught on camera.
 
  | ttfxxcc wrote:
  | I highly recommend you watch this lecture on blackmail
  | inflation https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=xlmhhh9HYqc
 
  | 01100011 wrote:
  | There's plenty to worry about with deepfakes. They enable what
  | amounts to a man-in-the-middle attack in real life. Imagine an
  | AI able to break into the conversation and maintain two
  | different communication threads with each party.
  | 
  | Imagine what happens when you present someone with the voice
  | and/or image of their loved one and pitch a product, plant an
  | idea, or execute fraud? What happens when an emotionally
  | unstable person is harassed by the voice of their lover or even
  | a deceased relative.
  | 
  | Now imagine that you could rent some computing power and
  | perform a million of those frauds in parallel. Psychological
  | warfare will never be the same.
  | 
  | When people tell me the robots are going to kill us someday, I
  | always reply that they won't have to, they'll just need to
  | convince us to kill ourselves.
 
  | imhoguy wrote:
  | Wait till we have real-time deep fake video and audio. That
  | will twist the world, especially the remote
  | work/schooling/presence one.
 
  | 127 wrote:
  | Machines that write believable stories can fabricate entire
  | realities. The deepfake stuff is just a very small part of it.
  | How much of the information we use to make our daily decisions
  | on come from unverified sources on the internet? How many of
  | the "trusted" sources are just paid PR for the rich and
  | powerful?
  | 
  | The deepfake stuff can be solved with public/private key crypto
  | anyways.
 
    | osmarks wrote:
    | How do you solve deepfakes with asymmetric cryptography,
    | without just trusting the person the videos purport to be of
    | to say (cryptographically) whether something is real or not
    | (which is not a good solution)?
 
| tziki wrote:
| Honestly, good for him. I don't see any reason why the whole
| influencer culture should be dominated by specific people just
| because they're lucky to have the prerequisite looks.
 
| optimalsolver wrote:
| Reminds me of Gay Girl In Damascus:
| 
| https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A_Gay_Girl_In_Damascus
| 
| Fun fact, the lesbian girl who outed him also turned out to be a
| middle-aged dude.
 
  | slibhb wrote:
  | See also:
  | https://www.theatlantic.com/international/archive/2021/03/kr...
 
| ape4 wrote:
| He actually has pretty good cheek bones
 
| anticristi wrote:
| I'm starting the .true TLD. Everything else on the Internet
| should be considered fantasy.
 
| Abishek_Muthian wrote:
| I wonder what happens when an update changes the filter and the
| person couldn't generate the same face again.
 
| nabla9 wrote:
| Maybe the first casualty of AI is Instagram influencers and nude
| models.
 
| yabadubakta wrote:
| I think this is pretty awesome. He was able to create a real
| avatar and go out there doing something he loved and share it
| with the world pseudonymously! Identity in our increasingly
| virtual reality can take on many turns.
 
| [deleted]
 
| smadge wrote:
| NEO: Right now, we're inside a computer program?
| 
| MORPHEUS: Is it really so hard to believe? Your clothes are
| different, the plugs in your arms and head are gone, your hair
| has changed. Your appearance now is what we call 'residual self-
| image'. It is the mental projection of your digital self.
| 
| NEO: This... this isn't real?
| 
| MORPHEUS: What is 'real'? How do you define 'real'? If you're
| talking about what you can feel, what you can smell, what you can
| taste and see, then real is simply electrical signals interpreted
| by your brain. This is the world that you know.
 
  | runawaybottle wrote:
  | Ignorance is bliss.
 
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