See also: face swap and face-swap

English

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Noun

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faceswap (plural faceswaps)

  1. Alternative form of face swap.
    • 2014 June 7, The Stooshie, number 3, London: D.C. Thomson & Co. Ltd, →ISSN, page 3:
      A Salmond/Cameron faceswap from @JimboLoony.
    • 2017, Charlotte Crosby, Brand New Me, London: Headline Publishing Group, →ISBN, page 176:
      Everyone was talking about him on the internet in May because he did a Snapchat faceswap with Harry Styles and people thought it was Harry with a new haircut.
    • 2019, Jay Owens, “Post-Authenticity and the Ironic Truths of Meme Culture”, in Alfie Bown, Dan Bristow, editors, Post Memes: Seizing the Memes of Production, Punctum Books, →ISBN, page 82:
      A month later deepfakes turned the process into an app—and Vice reported that “We Are All Truly Fucked,” as the faceswap porn trend swept Reddit.
    • 2021, Erik Goudart, “Diesney”, in Chimica Acta Lugduni, volume 55, Leiden: Chemisch Dispuut Leiden, →OCLC, page 25:
      A Disney-themed quiz with quotes, silhouettes, random facts, emoji film titles, song texts, and a faceswap with the committee heads and Disney-characters.