The impact of AI on daily life is becoming increasingly significant.  Falsified, altered, and/or manipulated content is on the rise.  Do you think AI detection tools will become as common as antivirus software, with everyone having one installed on their device to protect against misinformation?

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CISO in Manufacturing14 days ago

AI tech is already showing up in cybersecurity tools. Noticeably, also the opposite is true. AI is used to identify documents that are AI generated. For example, most Universities in US are implementing those tools (anti-plagiarism, anti-AI generated), as the new school year starts...

CISO| Legal & Regulatory APAC lead in Media15 days ago

AI detection , will evolve into a built-in capability, as a seamless component of browsers, messaging platforms, social media, and operating systems. Users won’t want another product to install or manage. They’ll expect trust to be embedded by default.

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no titlea day ago

Excellent point! However, I don’t think all browsers, social networks, messaging platform and so on will want to adopt 'anti-deepfake' technologies. At the very least, some won’t adopt them precisely as a strategic positioning move in opposition to those that do. If this turns out to be true, then we won’t be able to trust any content and will need to adopt a personal tool… We’ll see what happens, but thank you for the valuable contributions.

Director of Engineering Security at Okta in Software17 days ago

In my view, AI detection will become common, but not as a separate tool like antivirus. I believe it will be built directly into browsers, messaging apps, social platforms and even operating systems as an extension to existing tools. I do not think people will want another product to manage, they will expect trust to be built in by default. I believe the future is not about installing another layer of protection, it is about making content authenticity checks an invisible part of the digital experience.

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no titlea day ago

Excellent point! However, I don’t think all browsers, social networks, and so on will want to adopt 'anti-deepfake' technologies. At the very least, some won’t adopt them precisely as a strategic positioning move in opposition to those that do. If this turns out to be true, then we won’t be able to trust any content and will need to adopt a personal tool… We’ll see what happens, thank you for the valuable contributions.

Director of Operations in Transportation21 days ago

I don’t think we’ll see an AI equivalent of AV, largely because the AI attack surface is more at the user level than the machine level.
I do think we’ll see (and are already seeing) AI detections at various layers where humans traditionally interact such as email, or in platforms and services they leverage.  Additional training and awareness programs shoud assist.

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