The Society of Motion Picture and Television Engineers (SMPTE) is launching a Content Provenance and Authenticity (CPA) in Media Study Group (SG).
The study group will assess how current content provenance and authenticity technologies affect media production and distribution.
.jpg)
A key focus will be on the carriage of content provenance information in MXF files, which SMPTE said was due to an urgent industry need.
“The CPA SG was established at a critical juncture, as artificial intelligence (AI) becomes increasingly integrated into media production,” said SMPTE’s Director of Standards and Head of the CPA in Media Study Group, Thomas Bause Mason. “In this evolving landscape, ensuring that audiences can trust the authenticity of the content they consume is more important than ever. The SG will explore how CPA-related information can be transported effectively and securely across today’s professional media infrastructure.”
The scope of the project will be to identify content provenance and authenticity technologies, areas of work and activities in other professional media organisations, and make recommendations where SMPTE can update existing or create new standards to support the flow of content provenance and authenticity information.
The group will also gather use cases and requirements, and summarise its findings and recommendations in one or more study group reports.
The group includes representatives of the SMPTE Standards Community from Ross Video, Sony, Adobe, The European Broadcasting Union, and Metaglue.

SES completes Intelsat acquisition
SES has completed its $3.1bn (€2.8bn) acquisition of rival Intelsat, creating a global satellite operator with an expanded fleet of 120 satellites.

Wimbledon 2025 drives record digital audience for BBC Sport
Wimbledon attracted a record-breaking 69.3m online requests for BBC Sport from 30 June to 13 July – the highest ever digital engagement for the tennis championships on record.

WPP names Microsoft’s Cindy Rose as next CEO
Ad agency giant WPP has appointed Microsoft executive Cindy Rose as its next CEO, replacing Mark Read when he steps down on September 1.

HBO’s Harry Potter TV series starts production at Leavesden
HBO’s Harry Potter television series has officially started production at Warner Bros. Studios Leavesden in the UK.
.jpg)
Ofcom explores how tech firms can help users spot AI deepfakes
UK regulator Ofcom has published a discussion paper exploring the different tools and techniques that tech firms can use to help users identify deepfake AI-generated videos.