Not if the camera includes metadata like focus, shutter speed, accelerometer, GPS, etc. I don't really know, but I imagine the hardware security required wouldn't be too far from what's common now. Cameras are already unrepairable, so I suppose the arguments would have to be more from the privacy and who-controls-the-chipmakers perspectives.
GPS spoofers are available legally, you just replace the gps antenna with the spoofer, so no FCC violation. You'd have to break the law if you don't want to open the case to get to the antenna. I don't have any answers to the accelerometer or focus other than replacing those sensors too, and if you made the accelerometer on the same tpm enabled soc it would make moving shots like from a dash cam hard.
Its not like TPMs are infallible. And even if they are thought secure today, older encryption becomes trivial to crack with time. But like you said, its about raising the bar. You can do a lot to mitigate the threat of deepfakes to a certain point which will eventually push them back into just the realm of those who really know what they are doing. That's not ideal, but well funded and talents groups have been able to falsify evidence to discredit people since the beginning of time. So the nature of the problem doesn't change, they just have another tool.