Research
Tuesday April 18, 2023
Colloquium: Dongwon Lee (Penn State) - AI-Powered Fake News 2.0: Scenarios and Implications
12:30 to 2 p.m.
Hybrid: Zoom & UTA 5.522 (Large Conference Room)

Abstract: The recent explosive advancements in both generative language models in NLP and deepfake-enabling methods in Computer Vision have greatly helped trigger a new surge in AI research and introduced a myriad of novel AI applications. However, at the same time, these new AI technologies can be used by adversaries for malicious usages, opening a window of opportunity for disinformation purveyors and state-sponsored hackers. In this talk, Dr. Lee will present several plausible scenarios where adversaries could exploit these cutting-edge AI techniques to their advantage, producing more sophisticated disinformation by synthesizing realistic artifacts or evading detection from state-of-the-art disinformation detectors. He will conclude the talk by discussing the important implications of the new type of AI-powered disinformation (i.e., “Fake News 2.0”) and some future research directions.

Bio: Dongwon Lee is a professor and director of Ph.D. program in the information school (IST) at Penn State University, USA. He is also an ACM Distinguished Scientist (2019) and Fulbright Cyber Security Scholar (2022). Before starting at Penn State, he worked at AT&T Bell Labs, NJ,  and obtained his Ph.D. in Computer Science from UCLA. From 2015 to 2017, he has also served as a Program Director at National Science Foundation (NSF), co-managing cybersecurity education and research programs and contributing to the development of national research priorities. In general, he researches on the problems in the intersection of data science, machine learning, and cybersecurity. Since 2017 he has led the NSF-sponsored SysFake project at Penn State, investigating computational and socio-technical solutions to better combat fake news. For further details, please see: https://pike.psu.edu/dongwon/pro/research.html

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