Jingzhi Li, Changjiang Luo, Hua Zhang, Yang Cao, Xin Liao, Xiaochun Cao
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Deepfake techniques pose a significant threat to personal privacy and social security. To mitigate these risks, various defensive techniques have been introduced, including passive methods through fake detection and proactive methods through adding invisible perturbations. Recent proactive methods mainly focus on face manipulation but perform poorly against face swapping, as face swapping involves the more complex process of identity information transfer. To address this issue, we develop a novel privacy-preserving framework, named Anti-Fake Vaccine, to protect the facial images against the malicious face swapping. This new proactive technique dynamically fuses visual corruption and content misdirection, significantly enhancing protection performance. Specifically, we first formulate constraints from two distinct perspectives: visual quality and identity semantics. The visual perceptual constraint targets image quality degradation in the visual space, while the identity similarity constraint induces erroneous alterations in the semantic space. We then introduce a multi-objective optimization solution to effectively balance the allocation of adversarial perturbations generated according to these constraints. To further improving performance, we develop an additive perturbation strategy to discover the shared adversarial perturbations across diverse face swapping models. Extensive experiments on the CelebA-HQ and FFHQ datasets demonstrate that our method exhibits superior generalization capabilities across diverse face swapping models, including commercial ones.
期刊介绍:
The International Journal of Computer Vision (IJCV) serves as a platform for sharing new research findings in the rapidly growing field of computer vision. It publishes 12 issues annually and presents high-quality, original contributions to the science and engineering of computer vision. The journal encompasses various types of articles to cater to different research outputs.
Regular articles, which span up to 25 journal pages, focus on significant technical advancements that are of broad interest to the field. These articles showcase substantial progress in computer vision.
Short articles, limited to 10 pages, offer a swift publication path for novel research outcomes. They provide a quicker means for sharing new findings with the computer vision community.
Survey articles, comprising up to 30 pages, offer critical evaluations of the current state of the art in computer vision or offer tutorial presentations of relevant topics. These articles provide comprehensive and insightful overviews of specific subject areas.
In addition to technical articles, the journal also includes book reviews, position papers, and editorials by prominent scientific figures. These contributions serve to complement the technical content and provide valuable perspectives.
The journal encourages authors to include supplementary material online, such as images, video sequences, data sets, and software. This additional material enhances the understanding and reproducibility of the published research.
Overall, the International Journal of Computer Vision is a comprehensive publication that caters to researchers in this rapidly growing field. It covers a range of article types, offers additional online resources, and facilitates the dissemination of impactful research.