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Main Authors: Meinen, Lorenz, Schomäcker, Astrid, Wiedemann, Stefanie, Hartmann, Markus, Speith, Timo, Kästner, Lena, Kühl, Niklas, Rückert, Christian
Format: Preprint
Published: 2025
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2507.03457
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author Meinen, Lorenz
Schomäcker, Astrid
Wiedemann, Stefanie
Hartmann, Markus
Speith, Timo
Kästner, Lena
Kühl, Niklas
Rückert, Christian
author_facet Meinen, Lorenz
Schomäcker, Astrid
Wiedemann, Stefanie
Hartmann, Markus
Speith, Timo
Kästner, Lena
Kühl, Niklas
Rückert, Christian
contents The emergence of deepfake technologies offers both opportunities and significant challenges. While commonly associated with deception, misinformation, and fraud, deepfakes may also enable novel applications in high-stakes contexts such as criminal investigations. However, these applications raise complex technological, ethical, and legal questions. We adopt an interdisciplinary approach, drawing on computer science, philosophy, and law, to examine what it takes to responsibly use deepfakes in criminal investigations and argue that computer-mediated communication (CMC) research, especially based on social media corpora, can provide crucial insights for understanding the potential harms and benefits of deepfakes. Our analysis outlines key research directions for the CMC community and underscores the need for interdisciplinary collaboration in this evolving domain.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2507_03457
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Deepfakes in Criminal Investigations: Interdisciplinary Research Directions for CMC Research
Meinen, Lorenz
Schomäcker, Astrid
Wiedemann, Stefanie
Hartmann, Markus
Speith, Timo
Kästner, Lena
Kühl, Niklas
Rückert, Christian
Computers and Society
The emergence of deepfake technologies offers both opportunities and significant challenges. While commonly associated with deception, misinformation, and fraud, deepfakes may also enable novel applications in high-stakes contexts such as criminal investigations. However, these applications raise complex technological, ethical, and legal questions. We adopt an interdisciplinary approach, drawing on computer science, philosophy, and law, to examine what it takes to responsibly use deepfakes in criminal investigations and argue that computer-mediated communication (CMC) research, especially based on social media corpora, can provide crucial insights for understanding the potential harms and benefits of deepfakes. Our analysis outlines key research directions for the CMC community and underscores the need for interdisciplinary collaboration in this evolving domain.
title Deepfakes in Criminal Investigations: Interdisciplinary Research Directions for CMC Research
topic Computers and Society
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2507.03457