Digital image manipulation has contributed enormously the way fake news is being spread online in recent times. Images and videos are usually subjected to one or several transformations during redistribution on the Internet. These transformations could lead to the spread of misinformation and could totally change the story told by the original image/video. In the video, we show how AI could be used to link a transformed visual content back to its original source. Watch the video here.
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The Next DECaDE
Over the past six years, DECaDE has tackled some of the digital economy's biggest challenges. As generative AI, digital trade and global supply chains evolve, trusted systems that enable transparency, accountability and fair value exchange are becoming increasingly important. In our final Q&A, DECaDE Director Professor John Collomosse reflects on the centre's achievements and discusses the future opportunities, collaborations and research directions it has inspired.
DECaDE Research Recognised at CVPR 2026 with Compute Transparency Award
Researchers from DECaDE, part of the Centre for Vision, Speech and Signal Processing (CVSSP) at the University of Surrey, received international recognition at the IEEE/CVF Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition (CVPR) 2026 when their paper, TokenTrace, was awarded the CVPR Compute Transparency Champion Award.
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DECaDE Showcases Provenance and Attribution Research at CVPR 2026
DECaDE will have a significant presence at CVPR 2026, one of the world’s leading conferences for computer vision and AI, with contributions spanning synthetic media provenance, watermarking, attribution and trustworthy generative AI. CVPR takes place from 3–7 June 2026 in Denver, Colorado.