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AU10TIX unveils AnyDoc AI tool to combat document fraud risk

AU10TIX unveils AnyDoc AI tool to combat document fraud risk

Techday NZa day ago

AU10TIX has launched AnyDoc Authentication, extending its fraud detection and authentication services to cover a broader range of non-identity documents frequently used in various business operations.
The new capability targets documents such as utility bills, bank statements, and tax filings, which have become common vectors for fraudsters who seek to bypass conventional identity checks. AnyDoc Authentication leverages artificial intelligence, forensic forgery detection, and metadata analysis to expose forged, tampered, or synthetic documents. According to AU10TIX, the system performs more than 150 AI-driven forgery tests and processes documents in 5–20 seconds, achieving up to 99.99% accuracy and reducing manual reviews by 90%.
Detection features
AnyDoc Authentication is designed to flag manipulated text, font inconsistencies, synthetically generated content, and anomalies in document structure. It also validates metadata by cross-checking elements such as timestamps, issuing bodies, and creation trails to ensure document integrity.
The product supports the verification of both PDFs and image files without compromising accuracy. Document classification is performed within three seconds, enabling businesses to achieve near-instant authentication and decision-making capabilities.
AU10TIX Chief Executive Officer Yair Tal said, "Effective fraud prevention demands more than identity verification; it is built on ensuring the authenticity of every supporting document. With AnyDoc Authentication, we are redefining the standard for non-ID document authentication, enabling organizations to detect fraud at its source, before it infiltrates their systems. This is more than just a security feature; it's a critical layer of defense that fosters trust, mitigates risk, and closes the gaps fraudsters aim to exploit."
The system has been customised for use in regulatory compliance frameworks including Know Your Customer (KYC), Know Your Business (KYB), and Anti-Money Laundering (AML). It cross-references data extracted from the documents with trusted third-party sources. This process is designed to minimise the occurrence of false positives, facilitate compliance workflows, and mitigate the risk of synthetic and deepfake document attacks.
Industry support
AnyDoc Authentication is designed for sectors where both the volume and risk of document fraud are high. In education, it enables the validation of enrolment documents, scholarships, and institutional partnership records. The finance and banking sector can use the tool to identify fraudulent loan applications, tampered financial statements, and unauthorised tax filings.
For corporate compliance teams, AnyDoc Authentication facilitates the authentication of supplier contracts, business registrations, and tax records required for Know Your Business (KYB) processes. In travel and hospitality, it can be used to verify address proofs, a variety of travel documents, and materials used for guest onboarding.
The product is also available to organisations in the crypto and payments sectors for the detection of fraudulent merchant registrations and the authentication of cross-border KYC submissions. Healthcare providers may use it to confirm the authenticity of insurance documents, prescriptions, and provider credentials.
Operational context
AU10TIX stated that AnyDoc Authentication aims to provide real-time fraud detection and support organisations in implementing compliance frameworks. By automating the analysis and validation of non-ID documents, the company believes the solution can enable businesses to scale their onboarding and due diligence operations more efficiently while maintaining regulatory standards.

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Friends discover a bear in the back seat of their car … and she wanted out
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Friends discover a bear in the back seat of their car … and she wanted out

Nick Trout and Caden Sims heard a car horn honking a few times outside their cabin early Saturday morning, but they didn't think much of it. People honk their car horns. They had no idea .... Then, as they were in the kitchen ready to make breakfast for their crew -- nine former Pendleton Heights High School athletes who decided to take a summer trip together to Gatlinburg -- Trout tapped Sims on the shoulder. "Look, there's a baby cub out on this tree," he said to Sims. The two walked onto the balcony to get a better look at the miniature-sized grizzly. Still, they had no idea ... "Then I looked to my right, and I noticed that Trout's car is shaking. And so I'm thinking, 'What is going on?'" said Sims, 19, who will be a sophomore at Wabash University in the fall. "And then I hear the car horn go." What was going on inside Nick's car? Who was honking his horn? Who was big enough to make a car shake? From the balcony, Sims could see through the front windshield. Something was in the back seat of that car. He went down to check it out, and that's when he saw what seemed inexplicable. Unbelievable. A bear in the back seat. And she wanted out. "First off, I'm thinking, 'How did the bear get in there?' And then my second thought is, 'How am I going to get this bear out?' said Sims. He quickly shot a video of the bear to show Trout and the rest of the guys who, by this time, were all out of bed and going crazy. Unfortunately, Trout knew what he had to do. He had to get that bear out of his car. As his friends huddled by the window, giving him solid, but distanced, support, he ran out from the bottom patio door. He sprinted to the car door, quickly swung it open and then sprinted back in. The bear sat inside the car for another second or two, then she got out, looked around and walked away with her cub. When the guys went down to investigate, that's when they realized this bear wasn't messing around. Mama bear had literally ravaged the inside of Trout's car, destroying the passenger seat door, ripping out the ceiling liner and wreaking havoc on the back seat. Trout's first thought was his mom. "I'm just kind of freaking out because I had no clue what to do," said Trout, 19, who attends the United States Military Academy. "I wasn't expecting anything like this to happen. My first thought was I felt terrible about the car because it's my mom's car." Trout's mom had loaned her son her maroon 2016 Chevy Malibu to drive to Tennessee. He broke the news to her via text. Trout: No way, mom, I am so sorry. Mom: For what? Trout: A bear. Mom: What? Trout: In your car. Mom: Send me pics. And so, Trout sent his mom the photos who wasn't upset at all, just glad all the guys were OK. "My parents actually thought it was kind of funny how it happened," said Trout. How it happened isn't exactly known. Trout is positive when he went down to his car Friday night to get his friend's charger that he had locked the car. "I distinctly remember locking it, and I hadn't been out to the car the rest of the night." So, either Trout is mistaken, or mama bear knows how to pick locks. That, of course, is neither here nor there. The damage was done. The bear left some clues. It was clear she had entered the car from the passenger door. And it was clear she had climbed into the back seat. Trout doesn't think she was trying to destroy the inside of his car, rather she had gotten herself into a pickle and was stranded from her cub. Evidently, she knew how to open a car door from the outside but not from the inside. "So she was stuck in the backseat tearing the roof and all the doors apart," Trout said. "It looks like she was trying to get out." Come to find out, bears breaking into cars is a problem in the area. That's what the regulars told the guys. Amazingly, Trout ended up being one of the lucky ones. His car is drivable now that he finished ripping out the top liner so it wasn't draping down. Trout will drive back home to Indiana in his bear-ravaged car Sunday morning with a story to tell. A story none of them were expecting, but will never forget. "We haven't done anything like this before. So we just thought, 'You know, it's summer. We're all of age to go out somewhere on our own,'" said Sims. "So we just thought, 'What better place than Tennessee?'" Follow IndyStar sports reporter Dana Benbow on X: @DanaBenbow. Reach her via email: dbenbow@ This article originally appeared on Indianapolis Star: Friends discover a bear in the back seat of their car … she wanted out

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