COM-PRESS - Combating disinformation by equipping journalists with new image manipulation insights and detection methods.
Fact checking manipulated images is particularly challenging
Disinformation and misinformation is a growing problem for our society since the rise of social media. Images are spread and viewed at a rapid pace, without guarantees on their authenticity. To address this, independent news media conduct fact checks in which they check and refute viral messages. Despite news organisations’ vast baggage of experience and knowledge, detecting manipulations made with sophisticated techniques is extremely difficult.
Bringing fundamental research of image manipulation detection to the press
The COM-PRESS research project will develop detection methods that journalists can use to detect and debunk image manipulations. It investigates new, promising techniques that look deeper than what can be seen with the naked eye (e.g., at the compression history). The COM-PRESS consortium will further explore these techniques in fundamental research, while bridging the gap to socially relevant use cases.
Specifically, COM-PRESS works towards the following objectives:
- Investigating the credibility of existing manipulation techniques.
- Developing new detection methods of image manipulations, as well as searching for complementary detection methods.
- Opening up detection methods to journalists and evaluating them in concrete use cases. This was done by creating the COM-PRESS Image Manipulation Analysis Dashboard and integrating it in the CrossOver Dashboard.
In this way, COM-PRESS creates new insights in disinformation, in order to increase the resilience of citizens and journalists against disinformation.
The research consortium
The research groups IDLab-MEDIA and mict (both from UGent-imec) join forces with Apache (De Werktitel cv) as media partner. Moreover, the consortium is working with CheckFirst to build a dashboard. The project runs from October 2022 to June 2024, with subsidies from the Flemish government’s Department of Culture, Youth & Media (Departement Cultuur Jeugd & Media).
Contact person: prof. Peter Lambert
See also (in Dutch):
- Ruim 3 miljoen euro voor strijd tegen desinformatie on Vlaanderen.be
- Vlaamse regering trekt 3 miljoen euro uit in strijd tegen desinformatie on VRT NWS
- Apache werkt mee aan technologie om beeldmanipulatie te detecteren on Apache.be
- Vlaamse regering trekt 3 miljoen euro uit tegen desinformatie, onder meer voor Knack on Knack
- 3 miljoen voor strijd tegen desinformatie on De Standaard