Crypto World
Paradigm-backed Succinct launches ZCAM iPhone app to verify real media
Succinct Labs has launched ZCAM, an iPhone camera app built to verify photos and videos at the moment of capture.
Summary
- Succinct Labs launched ZCAM to verify iPhone photos and videos at the moment of capture.
- The app creates cryptographic fingerprints that help prove media came from a real device.
- ZCAM targets rising AI fake risks as fraud losses tied to generative AI continue growing.
The app uses cryptography to create a record linked to the device that captured the media.
The company said ZCAM “signs photos and videos at the moment of capture, producing a tamper-proof record that links content to the device that captured it.” The record allows users to check whether a file came from a real device and whether it was later changed or generated by AI.
ZCAM targets AI fake photo and video risks
The launch comes as AI-generated images and videos continue to raise concerns around online fraud, identity abuse, and false media. Succinct said commercial AI detection tools can fail, so its system focuses on proving origin rather than only detecting fakes.
According to the company, ZCAM creates a cryptographic hash from the pixels captured by an iPhone camera. This hash works as a digital fingerprint for the photo or video and can support independent verification.
Succinct also cited Deloitte Center for Financial Services research that estimated generative AI could help push fraud losses in the United States to $40 billion by 2027. The figure compares with $12.3 billion in 2023.
Adoption remains key for media verification
The app could serve businesses, journalists, and users who need proof that photos and videos are real. Media verification has become more important as AI tools make it easier to create realistic fake content.
However, broad use may depend on whether people choose to capture content inside ZCAM instead of their default phone camera. The product works best when users sign media at the original capture point.
Other projects have also used blockchain and cryptography to address AI-related trust issues. World, backed by OpenAI CEO Sam Altman, uses a human verification model to help separate real people from AI-driven online accounts.
Paradigm-backed Succinct expands crypto tools
Succinct Labs raised $55 million in a 2024 financing round led by Paradigm. The round also included support from founders linked to Polygon and EigenLayer.
The company said its SP1 zero-knowledge virtual machine secures more than $4 billion in digital assets. In August, Succinct launched the mainnet for its Succinct Prover Network and activated the PROVE token.
The Succinct Prover Network runs as a decentralized marketplace on Ethereum. It lets applications submit zero-knowledge proof requests, while independent provers compete to verify them.
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