Papers will be limited up to 8 pages according to the ICCV guidelines. All papers will be reviewed by at least two reviewers with double blind policy. Papers will be selected based on relevance, significance and novelty of results, technical merit, and clarity of presentation. Papers will be published in ICCV 2025 proceedings.
All the papers should be submitted through OpenReview.
Paper submission deadline: June 30, 2025 (11:59pm Pacific Time)
Notification to authors: July 10, 2025 (11:59pm Pacific Time)
Camera ready deadline: August 10, 2025 (11:59pm Pacific Time)
Workshop date: Oct 19, 2025
To advance the state of the art in video forensics, we have partnered with the Digital Safety Research Institute to host a video detection challenge.
This challenge will drive innovation in detecting and attributing fully synthetic and manipulated video content. It will focus on several critical dimensions, including generalizability across diverse visual domains, robustness against evolving generative video techniques, and scalability for real-world deployment. As generative video technologies rapidly advance—with increasing accessibility and sophistication of image-to-video, text-to-video, and adversarially optimized pipelines—the need for effective and reliable solutions to authenticate visual content has become urgent. This initiative aims to mobilize the research community to confront these challenges and strengthen global efforts in media integrity and trust. Learn more.