Deepfake fraud taking place on an industrial scale, study finds
TL;DR
AI content for scams can be targeted at individuals and ‘produced by pretty much anybody’, researchers say Deepfake fraud has gone “industrial”, an analysis published by AI experts has said. Tools to create tailored, even personalised, scams – leveraging, for example, deepfake videos of Swedish journalists or the president of Cyprus – are no longer niche, but inexpensive and easy to deploy at scale, said the analysis from the AI Incident Database. Continue reading...
Nauti's Take
The study confirms what many suspected: deepfakes have escaped the lab and hit the streets. What's notable isn't that fraud exists, but that it scales – with factory-like efficiency.
The real story: trust in visual media has become structurally obsolete. Anyone still believing a video is inherently proof has missed the memo.
The question is no longer whether deepfakes are coming, but how we'll prove authenticity going forward at all.
Summary
AI content for scams can be targeted at individuals and ‘produced by pretty much anybody’, researchers say Deepfake fraud has gone “industrial”, an analysis published by AI experts has said. Tools to create tailored, even personalised, scams – leveraging, for example, deepfake videos of Swedish journalists or the president of Cyprus – are no longer niche, but inexpensive and easy to deploy at scale, said the analysis from the AI Incident Database.
Continue reading...