AI Deepfake Detection Guide

Interactive guide to detecting AI-generated images, audio & video

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Synthetic media has crossed the threshold where casual viewers can no longer reliably tell real from generated. The AI Deepfake Detection Guide is an interactive, offline checklist of the artifacts and tells that current image, audio, and video generators still tend to leave behind — and how to weigh them.

How it works

Pick the media type and the guide presents a prioritised list of detection checks. As you inspect the media yourself, you mark each tell you observe. The guide weights the signals — some are far stronger than others — and gives an overall likelihood that the media is AI-generated, along with a recommendation.

Crucially, the tool does not analyse files for you. It teaches you to look, because the most durable defence against deepfakes is a trained human eye combined with source verification, not a single classifier that the next model generation will defeat.

What the checks cover

Images: malformed hands and fingers, distorted teeth and jewellery, garbled background text, asymmetric earrings or eyes, lighting that does not match reflections, and overly smooth or plastic skin texture. Audio: absent or unnatural breathing, flat emotional prosody, a suspiciously consistent noise floor, and clipped word boundaries. Video: irregular or absent blinking, lip-sync drift on plosive consonants, flickering at hairlines and edges, and inconsistent lighting across frames.

Tips and notes

No single tell is conclusive — generators fix individual flaws release by release, so the absence of artifacts never proves authenticity. The strongest move is always to verify the source and provenance: who published it, when, and whether a C2PA content credential is present. Treat a high likelihood score as a prompt to investigate the source rather than a final verdict. Everything here runs in your browser and nothing about the media you inspect is recorded or uploaded.

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