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Bond James Bond. Robotic fake handwriting for marketers and social engineers



Marketers quickly found out that there is a vulnerability in the “trust decision making system” - people are more likely to trust handwritten text than printed text. Very quickly handwritten fonts and signatures appeared in announcements / letters, but they were easily recognized. Now there is the possibility of automated writing “by hand” with a real pen (even pen), taking into account all indents, uneven distances, non-compliance with proportions, pressure and angle of inclination (traces of chocolates and coffee are automatically emulated).

Where there are bugs with confidence, there are social engineers right there. Diving in trash baskets will now bear more fruit. It will be possible to type enough handwriting for forgery.
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The Bond service, which provides services for sending real letters, has every chance of passing the "Turing hand-written test" (that is, a person cannot distinguish whether a person wrote a text or a robot).

I have often said that I know enough IT to not trust IT, but now the trust in “real documents” has collapsed. It’s enough just a few school essays to feed neural networks so that they can write for me (and even better than me). By the way, the Bond service provides services for the improvement / tuning of your handwriting.

So, what do we need to leave a will on us?
Step one. Create a 3d printer that emulates a handwritten letter.
Step two. We create a self-learning program and feed it several sheets of handwriting to a client victim .
Step three. Profit

Under the cat a brief overview of the equipment, examples of letters, acquaintance with the projects of Maillift (letters "by hand"), Bond (letters by hand and recognition and emulation of handwriting), Herald (as students soldered their printer)



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He came up with, "She" wrote:

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Kuka robotic arm

Bond


Video about the Bond service:



Video from CEO Bond:



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Printer used by Bond service

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Printer used by Bond service



Maillift




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The founders of the Maillift startup analyzed thousands of handwritten texts and found three signs by which human writing differs from robotic writing.

Herald


DIY project Herald with Hackaday 2013:



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The story of the creation of Herald, student handwriting machine
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Initial budget option

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The main thing that the team was a perfectionist

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Half done

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Late at night Calibration and adjustment

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First drafts

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First success


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Chinese Japanese version

My thanks to Nikola Tesla for the handwriting provided.
PS

Source: https://habr.com/ru/post/251815/


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