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Deepfake Investigators Have 48 Hours. Most Firms Can't Make It.

DEV Community: computervision·CaraComp·3 days ago
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Analyzing the technical shift in deepfake verification timelines The FTC’s enforcement of the TAKE IT DOWN Act has effectively turned digital forensics from a "best effort" workflow into a high-stakes race against a 48-hour SLA. For developers building trust-and-safety tools, OSINT platforms, or investigative software, this isn't just a policy update—it is a fundamental restructuring of the verification pipeline. When a platform faces $53,000 in fines per violation, the bottleneck is no longer the API call to "delete," but the algorithmic certainty required to verify a complaint before the clock runs out. The Math of Verification: From Hours to Seconds For years, many private investigators and small firms have relied on manual facial comparison. In a forensic context, a human analyst might spend three to four hours mapping landmarks on two faces to determine if they match. Under the new 48-hour mandate, that manual approach is technical debt that will break under the sheer volume of deepfake fraud.…

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