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I saw an AI feature that I'd actually use – and it's not what you might think

I saw an AI feature that I'd actually use – and it's not what you might think

Yahoo11-03-2025

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When it comes to AI features, it can sometimes feel like there are approximately five million of the things buzzing about right now. Every phone seems to have a dozen to play with, but there's a slight issue when it comes to how useful they actually are.
Superzoom and image creation tools are well and good, but I'm still a little suspicious of how many people actually use them particularly often. The biggest standout success in this area has been the proliferation of magic eraser-style options to let you get rid of annoyances in photos, but few features can match that utility.
At MWC this year, though, Honor had a more in-depth demonstration of the AI deepfake detection tech that it announced six months ago, and I was struck by how potentially useful it could be. The feature works easily, on the surface – when active, it can screen videos that you're watching, whether live or recorded, and give you an indication of whether they're likely to be genuine or involve a face-swap.
It takes a few seconds to process, before you're given a result that summarises how confident the AI is that you're being duped as a percentage, and seems like a complete slam-dunk in security terms. After all, we all hear a bunch about how scammers are starting to use deepfakes and vocal imitations to get one over on people.
A feature to mitigate that risk is a no-brainer, even if there are still questions about whether it'll always be active, or instead remain as a toggle that people have to use when they're suspicious of a video.
There are also still question marks in my head when it comes to reliability and messaging. In a pool interview I took part in, Honor's Eric Fang indicated that the feature currently has a 70% success rate, which is one of those numbers that both impresses and doesn't at the same time. A 70% chance of being saved from a fake video – that's ideal. A 30% chance that your phone tells you a video's fine when it's not – that feels sub-optimal.
Still, it wouldn't be the first AI feature that gets better as time goes on, as its model gets more sophisticated. Plus, the fact of the matter remains that I would actually use deepfake detection, which is a surprisingly high bar. Hopefully it's the first of a cavalcade of non-novelty features in the same vein.

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WWDC 2025 LIVE: Apple reveals its new iOS design
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Apple's new transparent iOS design is already getting roasted
Apple's new transparent iOS design is already getting roasted

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Apple's new transparent iOS design is already getting roasted

When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission. As ever, when it came to today's Apple WWDC event, most of the rumours turned out to be true. Apple changed its naming conventions to adopt a yearly approach, replacing iOS 18 with... iOS 26. The company also revealed new features for the beleaguered Apple Intelligence. But it's Apple's new design language, Liquid Glass, that appears to be raising eyebrows. Inspired by VisionOS, iOS 26 features tons of translucent UI elements designed to take advantage of the iPhone display's rounded edges. Apple says the new look "brings a new level of vitality" to iOS, but some users are drawing comparisons with another software – one that's older than the iPhone itself. Perhaps the clearest (pun intended) representation of the new Liquid Glass design language is the iPhone's new transparent mode, which joins Light Mode and Dark Mode as visual setting for icons and interfaces. As the name suggests, rather than light or dark, it makes elements transparent. Which all looks rather a lot like 2007's Windows Vista. Of course, iOS 26's visuals aren't only about transparent icons. The update includes a redesigned Phone app, simplified camera controls and a customisable Messages app. But even this early on, it seems clear that, at a glance, folk are going to remember this one as "the glassy one". Let's just hope that doesn't become "the Windows one".

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