Hi!
A bit of background/motivation: Sharing photos of protests can be an important part of the PR of political organizations. However, not everyone feels safe sharing their faces in connection to political organizing. That's why usually, faces are pixellated, or people wear face covering masks (which might be illegal on protests in some juristictions). Pixellated/hidden faces are quite ugly to normies, though, which can reduce the effectiveness of the publication.
So I had this idea: What if instead of pixelating the faces, I run some CV software on the image and all the faces get swapped with the faces of Hedy Lamarr, Diego Luna, or JC Denton. I remember that Snapchat could do live faceswaps with the selfie cam ten years ago, so some desktop software like that shouldn't be too hard to find in 2025, right? /j
Unfortunately, all the stuff I managed to find was some computer science projects in which you train some monster model with one hell of a dataset of each face you want to replace/emplace (which defeats the purpose of anonymizing political activists). Or some obnoxious AI startup which is waaaaay too busy sucking off Elon Musk and/or Sam Altman. I don't want to give my money/data to some doomed AI startup which ends up selling our likenesses to the NSA.
TL;DR: Is there some kind of desktop software which detects faces in an image and swaps them with another face? It's ok if there's only a framework (as long as it's not as bad as all the horrible OpenCV results you find in online tutorials).
Edit: I found something that I can work with
What about just not taking pictures or video of faces?
If you want to do some PR that appeals to people that aren't already on the left, then it's sometimes unavoidable.
I remember not being on the left. I didn't need to see faces to feel ways about stuff.
Especially if both sides are fucking masked!
I'm not talking about the current situation in the US. I'm talking about e.g. protest in Europe which aren't necessarily as heated up as the protests in LA right now. That might have not come across, sorry.
It's just more friendly to non-radicalised folks if the sharepic of the local union don't show up in balaclavas.
Still, i remember before i was quite so radical, and i don't think that would have been true for me?
That's good for you, butedoesn't apply to everyone.
Okay, but if we're speaking for people who are presumably neither of us, then that's my best tool.
What did you think, when you first saw masked protestors?
I'm not really interested in this kind of discussion. I was asking for a tool, not for a discussion of wether or not to use that tool.
FYI: In our instance, can reply with 'disengage' to end a discussion without conceding it.
But if you're saying it's effective, was it effective on you? What was your experience when you were the target audience you're talking about?
I already saidethat I am not interested in this discussion. Ask the people in my org. It always comes up when we're doing some solidarity photo.
So you just want to endanger people... So your job is easier?
Are you a serial killer who ritually murders OSHA inspectors in your free time? That seems like it would ve like 5% less evil
How do I want to "endanger people" if I want to hide the faces of people in my org? WTF is wrong with you?
Okay so that's people making videos of themselves on purpose to associate their identities? And nobody who didn't opt in? Then why does any measure of caution apply? What am i missing?
Basically every bit of context.
I asked about software to faceswap photos for when my org wants to publish a pic were everyone who is on it doesn't have to pixellate the faces, but rather faceswap the faces with other people (generated faces, historical figures, etc.).
I'd like to try that since everytime my org wants to take a photo (e.g. for showing international solidarity on social media), an argument arises of whether or not to pixellate the faces. Some people want their identities protected, other people think that pixellated faces damages public perception of the org.
How is that relating to anything you say?
The point of blurring your face is to not attach it to your identity. It works or it doesn't. That's the part I'm missing.
So is faceswapping