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Deepfakes come to remote job interviews | #cybersecurity | #cyberattack | #hacking | #aihp



The FBI warned last week that people are interviewing for tech jobs using stolen identities — and even deepfake videos.

Specifically, the FBI Internet Crime Complaint Center (IC3) on June 28 reported an increase in complaints about the use of stolen personal information — and even real-time deepfake video technology during Zoom interviews — by some tech job candidates to misrepresent their job experience or lie about who is actually applying for the job.

The FBI said that the rise in fake applicants is happening mainly in software development, database, and other software-related job openings.

The good news is that the deepfake technology used for live interviews isn’t working, according to the FBI. (Video tends to lag audio, and other anomalies can reveal the fake identity for what it is.)

The bad news is that while the technology for live deepfake video isn’t mature — yet — in the not-so-distant future, remote hiring might be fraught with the use of digital AI-enabled fakery.

In the past, deepfakes were less sophisticated, and all-remote job interviews were rare.

Copyright © 2022 IDG Communications, Inc.

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