The trust paradox in the deepfake era: how to protect your company’s reputation

deepfake

“Hi, I’m your CEO. We have an urgent acquisition, please transfer the funds to this account.” The voice is identical, the Teams video is flawless, yet the money vanishes in an instant.

Welcome to the trust paradox. In a world where “seeing is believing,” deepfake technology is rewriting the rules of the game. According to the World Economic Forum’s Global Risks Report 2024, AI-driven disinformation is expected to be the number one global risk over the next two years.

For managers, the stakes are no longer just data security, they are the company’s reputation and integrity.

The hard reality: deepfakes are no longer science fiction

This is not a theoretical risk. In February 2024, a multinational company in Hong Kong lost $25.6 million after a finance employee was tricked into joining a videoconference where all other participants were deepfakes of their colleagues (source: CNN/South China Morning Post).

Numbers that make you think:

    • Deepfake incidents increased by 257% globally in the past year (Keepnet Labs).
    • By 2026, Gartner predicts that 30% of companies will consider standalone facial authentication solutions insecure due to AI manipulations (Gartner Predicts 2026).

We believe the technology creating the problem can also provide the solution. Here’s how to build a digital “shield” around your organization:

Implement the “Zero Trust” protocol

In the era of digital manipulation, implicit trust is a vulnerability. Zero Trust assumes that no request is valid without additional verification, regardless of its source.

    • Solution: move from simple biometrics to multi-factor authentication (MFA) using hardware tokens and behavioral analytics.

Proactive detection technologies

Protection can no longer be manual. Systems are needed that detect the “digital noise” invisible to the human eye.

    • Solution: integrate security solutions that use Liveness Detection algorithms to identify injected videos in conference streams.

Build a culture of resilience: train the “critical muscle”

The weakest link remains the human factor under pressure. Managers must be trained to recognize social engineering tactics (unjustified urgency, secrecy).

    • Practical tip: establish out-of-band confirmation procedures (via a channel different from the initial request) for any transaction above a defined threshold.

Reputation is built over years and lost in milliseconds

Deepfakes represent the new frontline of cybersecurity. The paradox is that maintaining human trust within teams and with clients requires becoming far more rigorous with digital tools.

Protecting your company starts with a thorough audit of vulnerabilities and adopting technologies that can keep pace with AI evolution.

Are you ready to secure your company’s digital identity? At Aliant, we turn technological challenges into competitive advantages.

 

The Ant

The Ant

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