Deep Fake Recognition: Google Has a Finger In

May 5, 2025

dino orangeSorry, no AI used to create this item.

I spotted this Newsweek story: “‘AI Imposter’ Candidate Discovered During Job Interview, Recruiter Warns.” The main idea is that a humanoid struggled to identify a deep fake. The deep fake was applying for a job.

The write up says:

Several weeks ago, Bettina Liporazzi, the recruiting lead at letsmake.com was contacted by a seemingly ordinary candidate who was looking for a job. Their initial message was clearly AI-generated, but Liporazzi told Newsweek that this “didn’t immediately raise any flags” because that’s increasingly commonplace.

Here’s the interesting point:

Each time the candidate joined the call, Liporazzi got a warning from Google to say the person wasn’t signed in and “might not be who they claim to be.”

This interaction seems to have taken place online.

The Newsweek story includes this statement:

As generative-AI becomes increasingly powerful, the line between what’s real and fake is becoming harder to decipher. Ben Colman, co-founder and CEO of Reality Defender, a deepfake detection company, tells Newsweek that AI impersonation in recruiting is “just the tip of the iceberg.”

The recruiter figured out something was amiss. However,  in the sequence Google injected its warning.

Several questions:

  1. Does Google monitor this recruiter’s online interactions and analyze them?
  2. How does Google determine which online interaction is one in which it should simply monitor and which to interfere?
  3. What does Google do with the information about [a] the recruiter, [b] the job on offer itself, and [c] the deep fake system’s operator?

I wonder if Newsweek missed the more important angle in this allegedly actual factual story; that is, Google surveillance? Perhaps Google was just monitoring email when it tells me that a message from a US law enforcement agency is not in my list of contacts. How helpful, Google?

Will Google’s “monitoring” protect others from Deep Fakes? Those helpful YouTube notices are part of this effort to protect it seems.

Stephen E Arnold, May 5, 2025

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