A Chinese smartphone manufacturer is preparing to debut a new deepfake detection software, which it says uses AI to detect AI.
Embodying the schoolyard concept of it takes one to know one, the company says it analyzes the millions of individual pixels on a phone screen to look for things like faceswaps or other AI artifacts.
The pixel-level flaws include issues with border compositing, irregularities between video frames, and unusual facial features like face-to-ear ratios or hairstyle anomalies.
Called the GUI for Graphic User Interface, it was developed by the Chinese smartphone operator HONOR, and is included in the company’s new Magic Pro 7 smartphone.
It’s preparing the device for a presentation at the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona next month, Reuters reports.
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Generating a percentage chance that what you’re looking at might be generated or influenced by AI, the software works in just 6 seconds.
Other features on the phone include voice-command photo modification, allowing photography fans to remove elements in their pictures with their voice.
WATCH the story from Reuters and see what else their phone can do…