Software supply chain intrusions reached an unprecedented peak in October, surpassing previous monthly records by more than 30%, accordin...
This type of malware, often presented as a trustworthy mobile application, has the potential to steal your data, track your whereabouts, record conversations, monitor your social media activity, take screenshots of your activities, and more. Phishing, a phony mobile application, or a once-reliable software that was upgraded over the air to become an information thief are some of the ways it could end up on your phone.
Types of malware
Legitimate apps are frequently packaged with nuisanceware. It modifies your homepage or search engine settings, interrupts your web browsing with pop-ups, and may collect your browsing information to sell to networks and advertising agencies.
Nuisanceware is typically not harmful or a threat to your fundamental security, despite being seen as malvertising. Rather, many malware packages focus on generating revenue by persuading users to view or click on advertisements.
Additionally, there is generic mobile spyware. These types of malware collect information from the operating system and clipboard in addition to potentially valuable items like account credentials or bitcoin wallet data. Spray-and-pray phishing attempts may employ spyware, which isn't always targeted.
Compared to simple spyware, advanced spyware is sometimes also referred to as stalkerware. This spyware, which is unethical and frequently harmful, can occasionally be found on desktop computers but is becoming more frequently installed on phones.
Lastly, there is commercial spyware of governmental quality. One of the most popular variations is Pegasus, which is sold to governments as a weapon for law enforcement and counterterrorism.
Pegasus was discovered on smartphones owned by lawyers, journalists, activists, and political dissidents. Commercial-grade malware is unlikely to affect you unless you belong to a group that governments with ethical dilemmas are particularly interested in. This is because commercial-grade spyware is expensive and requires careful victim selection and targeting.
There are signs that you may be the target of a spyware or stalkerware operator.
Receiving strange or unexpected emails or messages on social media could be a sign of a spyware infection attempt. You should remove these without downloading any files or clicking any links.
Artificial intelligence is transforming how videos are created and shared, and the change is happening at a startling pace. In only a few months, AI-powered video generators have advanced so much that people are struggling to tell whether a clip is real or synthetic. Experts say that this is only the beginning of a much larger shift in how the public perceives recorded reality.
The uncomfortable truth is that most of us will eventually fall for a fake video. Some already have. The technology is improving so quickly that it is undermining the basic assumption that a video camera captures the truth. Until we adapt, it is important to know what clues can still help identify computer-generated clips before that distinction disappears completely.
The Quality Clue: When Bad Video Looks Suspicious
At the moment, the most reliable sign of a potentially AI-generated video is surprisingly simple, poor image quality. If a clip looks overly grainy, blurred, or compressed, that should raise immediate suspicion. Researchers in digital forensics often start their analysis by checking resolution and clarity.
Hany Farid, a digital-forensics specialist at the University of California, Berkeley, explains that low-quality videos often hide the subtle visual flaws created by AI systems. These systems, while impressive, still struggle to render fine details accurately. Blurring and pixelation can conveniently conceal these inconsistencies.
However, it is essential to note that not all low-quality clips are fake. Some authentic videos are genuinely filmed under poor lighting or with outdated equipment. Likewise, not every AI-generated video looks bad. The point is that unclear or downgraded quality makes fakes harder to detect.
Why Lower Resolution Helps Deception
Today’s top AI models, such as Google’s Veo and OpenAI’s Sora, have reduced obvious mistakes like extra fingers or distorted text. The issues they produce are much subtler, unusually smooth skin textures, unnatural reflections, strange shifts in hair or clothing, or background movements that defy physics. When resolution is high, those flaws are easier to catch. When the video is deliberately compressed, they almost vanish.
That is why deceptive creators often lower a video’s quality on purpose. By reducing resolution and adding compression, they hide the “digital fingerprints” that could expose a fake. Experts say this is now a common technique among those who intend to mislead audiences.
Short Clips Are Another Warning Sign
Length can be another indicator. Because generating AI video is still computationally expensive, most AI-generated clips are short, often six to ten seconds. Longer clips require more processing time and increase the risk of errors appearing. As a result, many deceptive videos online are short, and when longer ones are made, they are typically stitched together from several shorter segments. If you notice sharp cuts or changes every few seconds, that could be another red flag.
The Real-World Examples of Viral Fakes
In recent months, several viral examples have proven how convincing AI content can be. A video of rabbits jumping on a trampoline received over 200 million views before viewers learned it was synthetic. A romantic clip of two strangers meeting on the New York subway was also revealed to be AI-generated. Another viral post showed an American priest delivering a fiery sermon against billionaires; it, too, turned out to be fake.
All these videos shared one detail: they looked like they were recorded on old or low-grade cameras. The bunny video appeared to come from a security camera, the subway couple’s clip was heavily pixelated, and the preacher’s footage was slightly zoomed and blurred. These imperfections made the fakes seem authentic.
Why These Signs Will Soon Disappear
Unfortunately, these red flags are temporary. Both Farid and other researchers, like Matthew Stamm of Drexel University, warn that visual clues are fading fast. AI systems are evolving toward flawless realism, and within a couple of years, even experts may struggle to detect fakes by sight alone. This evolution mirrors what happened with AI images where obvious errors like distorted hands or melted faces have mostly disappeared.
In the future, video verification will depend less on what we see and more on what the data reveals. Forensic tools can already identify statistical irregularities in pixel distribution or file structure that the human eye cannot perceive. These traces act like invisible fingerprints left during video generation or manipulation.
Tech companies are now developing standards to authenticate digital content. The idea is for cameras to automatically embed cryptographic information into files at the moment of recording, verifying the image’s origin. Similarly, AI systems could include transparent markers to indicate that a video was machine-generated. While these measures are promising, they are not yet universally implemented.
Experts in digital literacy argue that the most important shift must come from us, not just technology. As Mike Caulfield, a researcher on misinformation, points out, people need to change how they interpret what they see online. Relying on visual appearance is no longer enough.
Just as we do not assume that written text is automatically true, we must now apply the same scepticism to videos. The key questions should always be: Who created this content? Where was it first posted? Has it been confirmed by credible sources? Authenticity now depends on context and source verification rather than clarity or resolution.
The Takeaway
For now, blurry and short clips remain practical warning signs of possible AI involvement. But as technology improves, those clues will soon lose their usefulness. The only dependable defense against misinformation will be a cautious, investigative mindset: verifying origin, confirming context, and trusting only what can be independently authenticated.
In the era of generative video, the truth no longer lies in what we see but in what we can verify.