how facial comparison algorithms detect AI Deepfakes aren't just a social problem or a "creepy" use of generative AI; they represent a sophisticated adversarial attack on human visual perception. For developers working in computer vision, biometrics, and digital forensics, the news of $200 million lost to deepfake scams in early 2025 is a massive signal. It tells us that our "gestalt" visual processing—the way the human brain identifies a face—is now a deprecated security model. The technical implication for those of us building investigation tools is clear: we have to move the goalposts from visual "realism" to mathematical "verification." The Latent Space Exploit When a scammer uses a tool like ChatGPT Images 2.0 or high-fidelity diffusion models to generate a fake US Marshal’s badge or a convincing face, they are optimizing for pixel-level realism. They want to trigger the human brain’s "trust" response by perfecting skin texture, lighting, and symmetry.…