Category: articles | Mar 25, 2026

 Deepfakes Are Now an AV Problem and the AV Industry Must Take Responsibility.

Benedict Onodu

Benedict Onodu

AV/IT Specialist, Experian

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Now what can AV do to take responsibility for the new AI threat of Deepfakes? Here’s where AV can lead:


undefined Secure the Capture Layer - Everything starts at the capture layer. If we can’t trust the camera or microphone, we can’t trust anything downstream.
undefined Authenticity starts at the source. Implement hardware‑level identity for cameras & mics.
undefined Integrate cryptographic signing of audio/video.
undefined Implement tamper‑evident metadata (time, device ID, location)
undefined Disable unused inputs to prevent injection.
If the source is trusted, deepfake insertion becomes far harder.

undefined Building Deepfake‑Resilient AV Products
The next generation of AV systems must be designed for authenticity and trust. That means embedding:
undefined Content verification
undefined Manipulation detection
undefined Audit‑ready logging
undefined APIs for enterprise governance tools.

undefined  AV devices already process audio and video in real time, which makes them the perfect place to detect anomalies. What must be monitored at the edge?
undefined Lip‑sync inconsistencies.
undefined Micro‑movement inconsistencies.
undefined Voice cloning artefacts.
undefined Frame‑level irregularities.
This is where AV manufacturers can lead with built‑in intelligence.

undefined Protecting the Signal Chain.
Most deepfake content enters through unverified or compromised streams.
A secure AV pipeline is now non‑negotiable. AV vendors must consider:
undefined End‑to‑end encryption.
undefined Signed firmware and secure boot.
undefined Validation of all external sources.
undefined Zero‑trust for AV‑over‑IP.
Trustworthy content requires a trustworthy chain.

undefined Securing Collaboration Workflows
Meeting rooms are now high‑risk environments for impersonation and voice. cloning. AV can reduce this risk with:
undefined Identity verification.
undefined Watermarked live video.
undefined AI‑based participant authentication.
undefined Controlled screen‑sharing.
This is how we protect real‑time communication.

undefined Governance Is the missing layer, its no longer optional, its a competitive edge. Technology alone won’t solve deepfakes.Governance gives AV teams the structure to act responsibly. What AV must do:
undefined Establish clear policies for AI‑generated media.
undefined Mandate Disclosure requirements.
undefined Aggressive staff training on deepfake indicators.
undefined Alignment with ISO 42001, ISO 27001, and NIST AI RMF.

The question now isn’t can AV stop deepfakes, it’s will we choose to?

Solutions in this article