Contact us today!
866-348-2602

Total Tech Care Blog

Total Tech Care has been serving Florida since 2001, providing IT Support such as technical helpdesk support, computer support, and consulting to small and medium-sized businesses.

Understanding the Threat of Geographic Deepfakes

Understanding the Threat of Geographic Deepfakes

Per our role as cybersecurity professionals, part of our responsibility is to put the developing threats out there in the world into perspective for the clientele that we serve. After all, with so many modern threats seeming to border on science fiction, it is only natural for smaller organizations to assume that their size will protect them from such attacks through simple lack of interest—or even that such threats will never be used practically at any significant scale. Unfortunately, these assumptions are too often mistaken.

For your business to survive, let alone thrive, you need to have prepared for every eventuality. To put the importance into context, let’s examine a threat that many may have shrugged off—deepfake images—and the potential they show in terms of future cyberattacks and misinformation campaigns.

A Refresher on Deepfakes

Deepfakes are images or video clips that have been manipulated by artificial intelligence to show something other than the truth. You may have seen a few lighthearted examples online, where a comedian’s face is replaced by the celebrity they are impersonating, or different actors are inserted into movie scenes. There are even mobile applications now available where you can create simple (albeit glitchy) lip synch videos based on a headshot.

Not all applications of this kind of AI-based image generation are so obvious, however. Just look at the This Person Does Not Exist website, where you can see the results of a generative adversarial network’s work in creating very convincing, imagined faces. Every time you click on that link, the website will display a completely unique and imagined photograph that looks like a real person, but isn’t.

While entertaining, such applications do little to highlight the actual risks presented by deepfakes when put to more extreme uses. Adult-themed deepfakes are already being used to generate pornographic materials of people without their consent, and deepfake technology has also been used to doctor up footage to manipulate political interests. However, another use for deepfakes has risen that has many concerned—geographic deepfakes.

What is a Geographic Deepfake?

Rather than manipulating a person’s face or words, geographic deepfakes are used to manipulate satellite imagery to hide or distort the appearance of the landscape. As this technology grows in popularity and accessibility, it could potentially be used to seriously impact businesses and governments around the globe.

How Serious are Geographic Deepfakes?

Let’s put it into context for a moment by going over how a geographic deepfake could be (and increasingly are being) used.

Let’s say for a moment that you were a military commander, and you were leading your troops through the field. Your objective isn’t far, all you need to do is cross a bridge that spans over a ravine that you’ll see once you crest the next hillside. Except, once you reach the top of the hill, you don’t see the bridge that your satellite imaging assured you would be there. You see the ravine, sure, but there’s no bridge to cross it.

There goes your plan, and such a failure is bound to have wide-reaching ramifications.

This exact scenario was brought up in 2019 by an analyst at the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency named Todd Myers—and is in no way a new tactic.

Throughout history, maps have been weaponized as a part of disinformation campaigns and propaganda and have even been manipulated to protect intellectual property. Cartographers would insert fabricated locales and details into their maps to try and catch any copycats out there—after all, if you had invented “Not-Realburg, Michigan,” seeing it on another map is a blatant clue that your work had been copied.

A recent study, compiled and published by the geography department at the University of Washington, explored the topic of deepfake-generated geography in more depth.

What the Study Contains

In their study, the researchers review the long, long history of embellishing maps—reaching back to the Babylonian era in the 5th century B.C.—before focusing on the modern, technology-based contexts of location spoofing and how it can be weaponized, sharing examples produced by the researchers specifically for the study as a proof of concept.

In short, the study does what the research team intended it to do: it highlights the very real capabilities of such technologies, and how easily they could potentially be abused with no single means of identifying when an image has been manipulated.

What’s worse, the inherent trust the public has for such images makes them particularly effective, according to the researchers. While the team was able to engineer a tool to help identify their own fake geographies, these kinds of tools will need constant maintenance to keep up with the improvements that deepfakes will inherently see as time marches on.

What Can Businesses Learn from This?

While these kinds of threats will hopefully have minimal impacts on most businesses for some time yet, it is still valuable to consider how such a technology could be used against a company’s operations. Returning to the example of the missing bridge above, it isn’t hard to imagine how such an event could create serious interruptions and delays to the supply chain. Taking it a step further, someone trying to interfere with your success directly could use such an attack to hide your business from view on a map.

We also can’t neglect the idea that cyberattacks tend to inspire other cyberattacks, so there’s no telling what an imaginative cybercriminal might think to do with such capabilities someday.

For now, the best thing that your business can do is to reinforce your business using the technologies available today. While it would be foolish to completely ignore the development of cyberthreats like deepfakes, there are other attack methods that need to be protected against in the present. Total Tech Care can help you in that aspect. Give us a call at 866-348-2602 to discuss what your business needs to make its technology more secure and more productive.

 

Comments

No comments made yet. Be the first to submit a comment
Already Registered? Login Here
Guest
Friday, 04 April 2025
If you'd like to register, please fill in the username, password and name fields.

Blog Archive

Sign Up for Our Newsletter

  • First Name *
  • Last Name *

      Free Consultation

      Sign up today for a
      FREE Network Consultation

      How secure is your IT infrastructure?
      Let us evaluate it for free!

      Sign up Now!

      Free Consultation
       

      Tag Cloud

      Security Tip of the Week Technology Best Practices Business Computing Cloud Privacy Hackers Productivity Hosted Solutions Efficiency Software Business Google Network Security Microsoft Internet Email Malware Backup Workplace Tips Innovation Data User Tips Computer Mobile Devices IT Services Hardware Disaster Recovery Android VoIP communications Business Continuity IT Support Smartphones Communication Smartphone Miscellaneous Mobile Device Small Business Network Browser Collaboration Productivity Cybersecurity Quick Tips Business Management Users Phishing Upgrade Windows Managed IT Services Outsourced IT Data Backup Ransomware Windows 10 Office Cloud Computing Data Recovery Server Save Money Passwords Windows 10 Gadgets Social Media Saving Money Holiday Chrome Tech Term Virtualization Automation Managed Service Microsoft Office Managed IT Services Facebook Artificial Intelligence Cybercrime Operating System Computers BYOD Wi-Fi Mobile Device Management Health Networking IT Support Hacking Internet of Things Remote Alert Information Technology Covid-19 Information Managed Service Provider Spam Office 365 Telephone Systems Recovery Employer-Employee Relationship Bandwidth Social Engineering Mobility Router BDR Application Password Money Human Resources Encryption Big Data Data Breach Applications Remote Monitoring Law Enforcement App History Mobile Computing Training How To Managed IT VPN Blockchain Apps Data Storage Patch Management Paperless Office Remote Computing Mobile Office Government Office Tips Private Cloud IT solutions Entertainment Website Budget Gmail Bring Your Own Device Data Management Settings Work/Life Balance Two-factor Authentication Vulnerability Windows 7 Word Mouse HaaS Google Drive Servers Infrastructure Voice over Internet Protocol Avoiding Downtime Flexibility Data Security Marketing WiFi Wireless The Internet of Things Lithium-ion battery Save Time USB Cleaning Firewall Vendor Conferencing Managed Services Telephone System Staff Software as a Service Display Virtual Reality End of Support Scam Apple Machine Learning Education Physical Security Remote Work Social Connectivity Safety Employee/Employer Relationship HIPAA Sports User Error RMM Redundancy Vendor Management Meetings Keyboard Risk Management Hacker Data Protection DDoS Printer Solid State Drive Wireless Technology Bluetooth Procurement How to Downtime Value Comparison Net Neutrality Workplace Strategy SharePoint Spam Blocking Electronic Medical Records CES Help Desk Data storage Printing Automobile Customer Service Hiring/Firing IT Consultant Business Technology Content Management Environment Computing Infrastructure Access Control Managed Services Provider Fax Server Going Green Virtual Assistant Humor Database Authentication SaaS Remote Workers Battery Business Intelligence Shadow IT Processor Legal Audit Worker Network Congestion IT Management Update Internet Exlporer eWaste Botnet Hard Drive IT Plan Google Docs Identity Theft PDF Computing Unsupported Software Wearable Technology Virus Proactive IT Retail Hard Drives Charger Instant Messaging Best Practice Augmented Reality Unified Threat Management Computer Accessories Fraud Robot Excel YouTube Compliance OneNote Black Market Computer Care Biometrics Current Events Remote Worker Digital Signage Telephony Virtual Desktop Cryptocurrency Samsung Document Management Cache AI Skype Amazon Web Services IT Infrastructure Science Safe Mode FinTech Criminal Data loss Bing Files Leadership Troubleshooting GDPR Hosted Computing Social Network Outlook Wireless Internet Distributed Denial of Service Start Menu Printer Server Online Shopping Investment Customer Relationship Management Chromecast File Sharing Employees Employee/Employer Relationships Screen Mirroring Analyitcs Loyalty Specifications ISP Programming Colocation Uninterrupted Power Supply Books Camera Windows 365 Inventory Frequently Asked Questions Wire Video Conferencing Mobile Evernote ROI Windows 10s Sales Bitcoin Cast Travel Shortcuts Monitor Millennials Cryptomining webinar Emergency Printers Point of Sale Personal Antivirus Tip of the week Smart Office Supply Chain Management Professional Services Wireless Charging Public Cloud Windows 8 Employer Employee Relationship Streaming Media Monitoring Batteries IT service Reputation Assessment Workforce Tech Support Virtual Private Network Windows 8.1 Digitize Content Windows Server 2008 Tools Cables Windows Server 2008 R2 Techology Tablet Laptop Customer relationships Domains Customers Television Telecommuting Manufacturing Project Management Email Best Practices Consultant Nanotechnology IT Assessment Audiobook IaaS Analytics Cortana Maintenance Touchpad Public Computer Computer Tips Digital Signature Managed IT Service Security Cameras Bloatware Politics Regulations Biometric Security Advertising Transportation Warranty Virtual CIO Best Available OneDrive WIndows 7 HVAC Peripheral Google Apps Computer Fan Tablets Rootkit Notifications Digital Security Cameras Analysis Using Data Entrepreneur 5G Workers Benefits Administrator Devices Copiers Enterprise Content Management Quick Tip Shortcut FENG Relocation IBM MSP Ergonomics Accountants Smartwatch Cost Management Flash Credit Cards OLED Social Networking Smart Technology Microchip Thought Leadership Development User Password Management PCI DSS PowerPoint Password Manager Virtual Machine Video Games Windows Media Player Supercomputer 2FA Fiber Optics Worker Commute Software Tips Multi-Factor Security Employee Running Cable Experience Sync Cabling Emails Search Engine Twitter Messaging Managing Stress NIST Policy Business Mangement Hypervisor Scalability Memory Dark mode Smart Tech Trend Micro Business Owner Trending Addiction SMS Cameras Amazon Default App Netflix NarrowBand Two Factor Authentication Procedure Recycling Saving Time Search Root Cause Analysis Google Search iPhone Knowledge Music Wiring dark theme Practices Shopping HBO

      Top Blog

      The reasoning for this is simple: you want to make sure that operations are proceeding as intended, even if you’re not there. If you completely check out from the workplace every time you leave, you could return from your vacation to a complete and total disaster that may have been prevented with y...
      QR-Code