Video Face Swapping: Terms, Requirements and Usage Guide

1. Copyright

Please ensure that you have the absolute and legal copyright for the uploaded videos and facial photos. This website does not hold the copyright for any uploaded or generated files, nor can it provide corresponding copyrights. All disputes arising therefrom or possible legal liabilities shall be borne solely by the uploader.

2. Privacy

The files generated by users and on this website will be retained for a maximum of 48 hours. After 48 hours, the system will automatically delete them without keeping any backups. You can also delete them manually.

3. Requirements for Uploaded Files

For single-person video face swapping

The uploaded video should be a single-person front-facing video (the face in the video should be directly facing the camera, with both eyes, nose, mouth, forehead and chin all exposed, as this achieves the best effect. Other angles may lead to issues such as flickering and out-of-focus).

Requirements for the replacement face

It should be a high-definition front-facing photo without masks (both eyes, nose, mouth, forehead and chin all need to be exposed).

Special note: What is meant by a front-facing face and a slightly side-facing face is that a person's both eyes, nose, two corners of the mouth, forehead and chin are all clearly visible and without masks, so the face swapping effect will be very good. In addition, excessive movement may cause blurry images, so try to use relatively static video frames as much as possible.

4. Usage Method

  1. Upload the source video file to be replaced first.
  2. Select and upload the facial picture to be replaced.
  3. Start the conversion.
  4. Download the synthesized file.

5. Computing Power Consumption

According to the regulations of this website, every 25 frames are counted as 1 second. If it is less than 1 second, it will be calculated as 1 second. If the total length of the video is less than 10 seconds, it will be calculated as 10 seconds.

If the resolution is lower than 1280, it consumes 2 units of computing power per second;

If the resolution is greater than 1280 and less than or equal to 1920, it consumes 4 units of computing power per second;

If the resolution exceeds 1920, it consumes 6 units of computing power per second.