Preventing these secnarios requires both convincing large organizations to implement cryptographic timestamps and implementing these timestamps on every significant private archive. Even the implementation cannot be done on anything close to a five-figure budget; engineering time is way more expensive.
It’s also very very hard to convince middle managers who don’t understand cryptography to publicly post (hashes of) private data for no conceivable benefit.
My rough budget guess is probably off, as you say. For some reason I just looked at hardware and took a wide margin. For a grant application this has to be ironed out a lot more seriously.
I admit that popularizing the practice for private archives would take a significant effort far beyond a 5-digit budget. I envisioned doing this in collaboration with the internet archive as a first project to reap the most low-hanging fruits, and then hopefully it’d be less difficult to convince other archives to follow suit.
It’s worth noting that implementations, commercial services and public ledgers for time-stamping already exist. I imagine scaling, operationalizing and creating interfaces for consumption would be major parts of the project for the internet archive.
Assuming that this is both useful and time or funding constrained, you could be selective in how you roll it out. Images of world leaders and high profile public figures seem most likely to be manipulated and would have the highest negative impact if many people were fooled. You could start there
you could be selective in how you roll it out. Images of … high profile public figures seem most likely to be manipulated
Thank you, perhaps the first priority should be to quickly operationalize timestamping of newly created content at news organizations. Perhaps even before publication, if they can be convinced to do so.
Preventing these secnarios requires both convincing large organizations to implement cryptographic timestamps and implementing these timestamps on every significant private archive. Even the implementation cannot be done on anything close to a five-figure budget; engineering time is way more expensive.
It’s also very very hard to convince middle managers who don’t understand cryptography to publicly post (hashes of) private data for no conceivable benefit.
Good criticism.
My rough budget guess is probably off, as you say. For some reason I just looked at hardware and took a wide margin. For a grant application this has to be ironed out a lot more seriously.
I admit that popularizing the practice for private archives would take a significant effort far beyond a 5-digit budget. I envisioned doing this in collaboration with the internet archive as a first project to reap the most low-hanging fruits, and then hopefully it’d be less difficult to convince other archives to follow suit.
It’s worth noting that implementations, commercial services and public ledgers for time-stamping already exist. I imagine scaling, operationalizing and creating interfaces for consumption would be major parts of the project for the internet archive.
Assuming that this is both useful and time or funding constrained, you could be selective in how you roll it out. Images of world leaders and high profile public figures seem most likely to be manipulated and would have the highest negative impact if many people were fooled. You could start there
Thank you, perhaps the first priority should be to quickly operationalize timestamping of newly created content at news organizations. Perhaps even before publication, if they can be convinced to do so.