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Not hard to find if 'Thaksin's clip' is real: Forensic Cop


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Not hard to find if 'Thaksin's clip' is real: Forensic Cop

THE NATION

BANGKOK: -- The sophisticated technology of today could quickly and easily determine if the two men in an audio clip conspiring to bring former PM Thaksin Shinawatra back to Thailand were actually Thaksin and Deputy Defence Minister Yuthasak Sasiprapha.

"If a clip is fake, you can see that the graph will rise and fall," Pol Lt Colonel Watcharat Chalermsuksan, a director at the Central Institute of Forensic Science (CIFS), said yesterday.

Software like "Audacity" offered an easy and straightforward technique to dissect audio material by showing a sound graph, he said.

Besides the voices, listening to background noise can be a giveaway. Fake clips do not have the same background noise, he said.

"It is also easier to determine whether a clip is doctored if we have the original," he said.

The clip that has gone viral has become another hot potato for the government.

While many believe it is genuine, Pheu Thai MPs claim it was made to sabotage the Yingluck government.

Audio frequency analysers have been widely used by various industries for some time, while the government can turn to the National Police's Scientific Crime Detection Institute and the Justice Ministry's CIFS for forensic investigation.

However, it is harder to detect a voice modified to sound like a specific person.

The National Electronics and Computer Technology Centre is developing a program to check voice authenticity that is 100 per cent correct.

The centre's equipment is 80 per cent accurate in terms of voice manipulation analysis.

Assoc Prof Sathon Vijarnwannaluk from Chulalongkorn University said it was more |difficult to determine if a voice is genuine or edited than to check if an audio clip is doctored.

"It may be easier to detect a manipulated voice in a spoken word but it is harder to detect it in a sentence,'' he said.

Examples of people whose voices have been imitated are popular Buddhist monk Phayom Kanlayano and even Thaksin, he said.

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-- The Nation 2013-07-10

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Why hasn't a major newspaper sent a copy of the clip to a company in the States States that analyses these things?

Sent from my i-mobile IQ 6 using Thaivisa Connect Thailand mobileal app

nah they just rip and modify an existing program

way cheaper

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Where is the clip I reckon I can tell Thaksin's voice from another. Has the clip been made publically available?

would love to have a go at it also

i even have some hightech as headphones and way better programs than audacity

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The article mentions a programme called audacity well this so called program is very low end almost amateur likeused by at home studio musicians .There are many programs that voice analysts use this is not one of them,

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The article mentions a programme called audacity well this so called program is very low end almost amateur likeused by at home studio musicians .There are many programs that voice analysts use this is not one of them,

Agreed. That is a freeware program, and I do not think it will do anywhere near the job. A simple search on Google for "voice matching software" gives you much better choices.

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The article mentions a programme called audacity well this so called program is very low end almost amateur likeused by at home studio musicians .There are many programs that voice analysts use this is not one of them,

Agreed. That is a freeware program, and I do not think it will do anywhere near the job. A simple search on Google for "voice matching software" gives you much better choices.

Don't worry, the HUB of voice recognition is hard at work and has a suitable program in a few days

The National Electronics and Computer Technology Centre is developing a program to check voice authenticity that is 100 per cent correct.
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Not hard to find if 'Thaksin's clip' is real: Forensic Cop

yes even specialists from abroad have difficulties testifying in court if a certain voice belongs to a certain person - see the ongoing Trevon Martin case in the US where not one single forensic expert could tell which one is shouting for help the suspect or the victim!

But it is easy for the Thai police to find out who the voices on this tape belong to with software you can buy in any computer shop!! hahahaha.....hahahahaha cheesy.gif clap2.gif

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While many believe it is genuine, Pheu Thai MPs claim it was made to sabotage the Yingluck government.

No need to sabotage this government...they're doing a fine job on their own clap2.gif

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"While many believe it is genuine, Pheu Thai MPs claim it was made to sabotage the Yingluck government."

This is all you need to keep the PTP believes happy. Anyone who says anything different, is just trying to discredit the government.

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The article mentions a programme called audacity well this so called program is very low end almost amateur likeused by at home studio musicians .There are many programs that voice analysts use this is not one of them,

Agreed. That is a freeware program, and I do not think it will do anywhere near the job. A simple search on Google for "voice matching software" gives you much better choices.

Don't worry, the HUB of voice recognition is hard at work and has a suitable program in a few days

The National Electronics and Computer Technology Centre is developing a program to check voice authenticity that is 100 per cent correct.

The man in Dubai bought that company already and stopped distribution of all software, I wonder why? whistling.gif

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"It is also easier to determine whether a clip is doctored if we have the original," he said.

No kidding ? HaHa--------- Love the simplicity of it all

The original recording is in digital form on someone's phone. Since it is in digital form, all copies are identical to the original with no degradation of quality. The youtube version would suffice for forensic testing. There is no desire, either by the police or the press, to prove this recording is genuine; especially when everyone 'knows' it is. Krieng Jai - the desire not to cause someone embarrassment or discomfort - is still a strong factor in Thai culture. This is why there is little investigative/expose' type reporting in Thailand; it is mostly quoting government sources or antigovernment sources. Reporters are afraid of lawsuits for libel if they cannot expose their methods or sources.

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