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McAfee and Lenovo launch "world's first automatic Deepfake detector" to curb AI fraud

2024-08-23

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IT Home reported on August 23 that cybersecurity company McAfee and Lenovo have cooperated to launch a new Deepfake Detector, claiming to be the world's first automatic Deepfake detector that can curb phishing.

McAfee said that the tool is based on its own AI algorithm and can help users identify possible Deepfake scams and other AI scams. It has invited some Lenovo AI PC users in the United States, the United Kingdom, and Australia to test it, and it is initially limited to English contexts.

McAfee said that Deepfake Detector has been trained using more than 200,000 samples. It does not rely on cloud networks, but instead uses the NPU in Lenovo AI PC to identify directly from the PC.

McAfee said this local deployment approach has many advantages, maintaining user privacy without affecting speed and protecting the security and privacy of user data.

Users who purchase Lenovo's new AI PC will also receive a 30-day free trial of McAfee Deepfake Detector, with pricing starting at $9.99 in the United States for the first year (IT Home Note: currently approximately RMB 71.3).