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Latest coverage for Deepfake

Stay informed with the latest on Deepfakes: explore news, trends, and insights into how AI-generated fakes impact information security.

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Deepfake technology uses artificial intelligence to create realistic but fabricated audio or video that depicts people saying or doing things they never did. This synthetic media can convincingly mimic voices and faces, making it difficult to distinguish genuine content from manipulated material. The technology relies on machine learning models trained on large datasets of real images and sounds to generate these forgeries.

In information security, deepfakes pose risks such as enabling sophisticated social engineering attacks where attackers impersonate trusted individuals to extract sensitive information or authorize fraudulent transactions. They also threaten biometric authentication systems that use facial or voice recognition, potentially allowing unauthorized access. Defending against deepfake threats involves deploying detection tools that analyze inconsistencies in media, implementing multi-factor authentication beyond biometrics, and training users to verify unusual requests through independent channels.

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Bank Info Security 6 months, 2 weeks ago

Top 10 Cybersecurity Trends to Watch in 2026

Experts on Cyberattacks, Deepfakes, AI and Geopolitical Strife in the Year AheadCyberattacks, nation-state hacking and geopolitical shifts dominated 2025, but the year will also be remembered as a turning point - where AI blurred the lines between real and fake and AI agents introduced new enterprise risks. Our panel of experts discusses the top 10 trends to watch in 2026.

Bank Info Security 6 months, 2 weeks ago

Fraud Leaders Warn of Deepfakes, Stablecoin Risks Ahead

Synthetic Entities, AI-Driven Scams, Stablecoin Misuse Pose Key Threats in 2026Artificial intelligence-powered scams reached new heights in 2025. In the coming year, those threats will evolve further, with synthetic entities, stablecoin abuse and deepfakes driving fraud campaigns. Banks and lenders need better data, reporting and regulations to stay ahead of fraudsters.