LEHI, UTAH (September 2024) – The rise of fake videos featuring celebrities, politicians, and business leaders has evolved from a mere online curiosity into a significant threat. These misleading clips pose risks to market values, influence election results, spread disinformation, and facilitate phishing attacks on an unprecedented scale.
As the 2024 US elections approach, Attestiv has introduced a robust deepfake detection platform tailored for individuals, influencers, and businesses. This new tool is available for free, with premium and enterprise options also offered, allowing users to verify video authenticity and equipping victims of deepfake fraud with essential resources to combat these threats.
The newly launched video deepfake detection platform, accessible for early users at https://video.attestiv.com, enables anyone to analyze videos or their associated links for deepfake content. Attestiv’s technology utilizes proprietary AI analysis to provide scoring and a detailed breakdown of deceptive elements, indicating precisely where they appear within each video.
With this free deepfake detection tool, Attestiv offers an efficient and dependable method for assessing the legitimacy of digital videos, helping individuals and businesses guard against fraud, financial losses, and reputational harm. The platform is particularly beneficial for sectors that demand high levels of integrity, security, and compliance, such as banking, insurance, real estate, media, and healthcare.
“As generative AI tools continue to flood the market, facilitating deception, we are pleased to empower individuals and businesses with our free deepfake video detection platform. Our extensive experience in fake and fraud detection, honed through rigorous applications in insurance, is now available to help everyone defend against this cyber threat that can lead to substantial reputational and financial damage,” stated Nicos Vekiarides, founder and CEO of Attestiv.
The rapid advancement of artificial intelligence and applications capable of superimposing one person’s face onto another has led to a surge in fake videos, many of which are created with harmful intent. A report from Reuters in 2023 noted that “realistic yet fabricated videos generated by AI algorithms trained on vast online footage are among the countless examples emerging on social media, creating a blur between reality and fiction.” This issue has prompted Congressional hearings and advisories from government agencies like the NSA, focusing on the cybersecurity challenges posed by synthetically created media.
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