Just in time for the 2024 US elections, the call screening and fraud detection company Hiya has launched a free Chrome extension to spot deepfake voices. The aptly named Hiya Deepfake Voice Detector ālistensā to voices played in video or audio streams and assigns an authenticity score, telling you whether itās likely real or fake.
Hiya tells Engadget that third-party testers have validated the extension as over 99 percent accurate. The company says that even covers AI-generated voices the detection model hasnāt trained on, and the company claims it can spot voices created by new synthesis models as soon as theyāre launched.
We played around with the extension ahead of launch, and it seems to work well. I pulled up a YouTube video about the blues pioneer Howlinā Wolf that I suspected used AI narration, and it assigned it a 1/100 authenticity score, declaring it likely a deepfake. Suspicions confirmed.
Hiya threw a well-earned jab at social media companies for making such a tool necessary. āItās clear social media sites have a huge responsibility to alert users when the content they are consuming has a high chance of being an AI deepfake,ā Hiya President Kush Parikh wrote in a press release. āThe onus is currently on the individual to be vigilant to the risks and use tools like our Deepfake Voice Detector to check if they are concerned content is being altered. Thatās a big ask, so weāre pleased to be able to support them with a solution that helps put some of the power back in their hands.ā
The extension only needs to listen to a few seconds of a voice to spit out a result. It works on a credit system to prevent Hiyaās servers from getting slammed by excessive requests. Youāll get 20 credits daily, which may or may not cover the flood of manipulative AI content youāll come across on social media in the coming weeks.
This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/ai/a-new-chrome-extension-can-reliably-detect-ai-generated-voices-130059842.html?src=rss