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Leica camera has built-in defense against misleading AI, costs $9,125
(arstechnica.com)
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Content Credentials, announced in October, includes encrypted metadata detailing where and when the photo was taken and with what camera and model.
When a photographer opts to use the feature, they'll see a Content Credentials logo in the camera's display, and images will be signed through the use of an algorithm.
Users who find these images online can click on the CR icon in the [pictures'] corner to pull up all of this historical manifest information as well, providing a clear chain of providence, presumably, all the way back to the original photographer.
Content Credentials can help instill trust in shared images, but only if it sees notable adoption.
"The Leica M11-P launch will advance the CAI’s goal of empowering photographers everywhere to attach Content Credentials to their images at the point of capture, creating a chain of authenticity from camera to cloud and enabling photographers to maintain a degree of control over their art, story, and context," the CAI, whose 2,000-member roster includes Leica, Adobe, the Associated Press, Microsoft, and Reuters, said in a blog post Thursday.
Other M11-P specs include a 60 MP BSI CMOS sensor, Leica's Maestro-III processor, and 256GB of storage.
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