As AI deepfakes spread faster and become more difficult to detect, publishers are caught in the crosshairs, with fact-checking teams working harder to verify what’s real and protect their organization’s credibility in an internet flooded with AI-generated content.
Fresh data shows the deepfakes are spiking. A new report from IdentifAI, a startup focused on detecting deepfakes and other AI-generated or AI-altered content, identified 3,165 incidents of deepfakes in March 2026 alone, up from just four in January 2020.
The report, which was based on 10,000 deepfake incidents, spotlighted a clear escalation: synthetic media and manipulation have entered a more dangerous phase globally, with deepfakes fueling political instability, enabling large-scale financial exploitation, and shaping public perception. The incidents were often amplified by social media algorithms, according to the report.
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