An open question, related to cyberpunk culture.

Considering the possibilities of current social-engineering as used by social media and desinformation, to what degree ido you think it is now possible to ‘implant’ fake memories into somebody’s consciousness, without that person noticing it.

  • kristoff@infosec.pubOP
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    2
    ·
    4 months ago

    First … thanks all for replying. Sorry for the late reply. … know you … summer … holiday … :-)

    Yes, that was indded my question. Some objective and scientific research into this. Interesting reading. Thanks.

    My idea was kind-of the result of what we see in cybersecurity: What we are seeing is that with AI disinformation has become so easy and cheap, and also easy to automate. Can we assume a senario where desinformation -like phishing moving into the area of spear phising- is becoming personal.

    Just wondering. Certain social media have a feature ‘remember, x years ago, you took part in this event’ (with some photo’s you shared about that event)’ What would happen if you start feeding people false information? Or semi-fake information? Including posts by other people?

    I agree. Getting people to believe they took part in <some event> x years ago might not be easy. But can you get people to question certain secundairy elements. “Did I really meet <some person> during <some event> 4 years ago?”

    I wonder. How many people rely on their own memories what they did in the fast? And how many rely on what the photos in their smartphone and/or social media account tell them?

    Kr.

    • Rolando@lemmy.world
      link
      fedilink
      arrow-up
      1
      ·
      4 months ago

      I agree. Getting people to believe they took part in <some event> x years ago might not be easy. But can you get people to question certain secundairy elements. “Did I really meet <some person> during <some event> 4 years ago?”

      It would probably be pretty easy in a cult-like situation, where the person wants to believe it and has a community that supports that belief. Also, I think certain types of cognitive-behavioral therapy boil down to convincing yourself that a certain belief/memory is better managed by turning it into a different belief/memory. But that’s not something I’m as familiar with.