
We are collecting short real-world video clips from phones, cameras, and everyday environments to help calibrate forensic signals used in media authenticity analysis.
Authentic camera footage contains subtle visual and temporal signatures that are essential for reliable forensic analysis. The ClipForensics Corpus is being built to capture these signals across a wide range of devices, scenes, and recording conditions.
We are collecting short video clips that represent real-world camera capture. These clips help establish baseline signals used to distinguish authentic footage from manipulated or synthetic media.
Clips do not need to be professionally produced. Everyday recordings from phones and consumer cameras are extremely valuable for calibration.
Duration
3–30 seconds
Content
Original recordings, edited clips, or B-roll
Source
Phone cameras, DSLRs, mirrorless cameras, GoPros, or similar devices
Scenes
Any environment or subject matter (except sensitive or private material)
Most useful clips fall well within typical consumer camera file sizes.
| Source | 10 seconds | 30 seconds |
|---|---|---|
| Phone 1080p | ~25–30 MB | ~75–90 MB |
| Phone 4K | ~60 MB | ~180 MB |
| GoPro 4K | ~80 MB | ~240 MB |
| DSLR H.264 | ~50 MB | ~150 MB |
| ProRes / RAW | ~500 MB | ~1.5 GB |
Ideal file size: under 500 MB. Most phone and consumer camera clips are significantly smaller.
Maximum upload size: 2 GB
The corpus is currently in its early calibration stage. Early contributions help establish the baseline signals that forensic systems rely on.
Upload a short clip (3–30 seconds). Most clips from phones or cameras fall between 20–200 MB.
Large original formats such as ProRes or RAW are accepted up to 2 GB.
Contribute a ClipUploaded clips are used only for research calibration and dataset analysis.