In October 2019, in order to respond to new types of cybercrime that are expanding due to the evolution of AI technology, the government launched a "Proof of Humanity" initiative, which focuses on protecting personal information.
He emphasized the importance of "Human" technology. This year, the number of fraud victims using DeepFei is expected to increase by 162% compared to last year, and DeepFei-related
The number of files is predicted to skyrocket from about 500,000 in 2023 to 8 million by 2025. AI-generated voices are used to pose as family members and ask for money, and fake videos of executives are used.
Increasingly sophisticated fraud methods, such as using statues to trick employees into transferring millions of dollars, are threatening both businesses and individuals.
Meanwhile, a survey conducted by TFH in March this year targeting 800 domestic gamers found that
Of the 100 respondents, 79% were concerned about "bots violating game fairness," 83% said "human verification technology needs to be introduced," and 91% said "a system to distinguish between AI and humans will become essential in the future."
TFH analyzed that cybercrime is spreading in various forms and called for vigilance against the following three new threats:
Impersonation) Online videos and audio can be targets for AI cloning. "Synthetic impersonators" that mix real and fake data can go undetected for years, and can be used on phone calls and videos.
The reliability of calls is under threat. Trust Crisis Fueled by Fake Profiles
An estimated 10-15% of dating app users are fake profiles, and AI-generated resumes are on the rise in business networks.
False reviews created by bots can destroy a company's reputation.
Bot accounts manipulate comments and poll results to create false public opinion.
With humans controlling thousands of accounts, it is becoming increasingly difficult to distinguish between genuine and manipulated opinions. TFH has taken this situation into consideration and is developing a platform for next-generation security, called "unique human accounts."
The paper proposes that a "Proof of Humanity" should be established. It sets out the following four principles: Privacy-First Verification
Verification: Cryptographically proves identity without revealing personal information. Universal interoperability
Interoperability: Maintaining trust between multiple services with a single verification while preventing cross-tracing.
Design: Human identity verification that cannot be stolen or copied like a password. Global accessibility
Accessibility): Establish a system that can be used by anyone, regardless of device or environment.
One of the technologies that implements this concept is "World ID (World
Once users anonymously prove they are human, they build mutual trust with others, enabling safe digital interactions that eliminate bots and fraud.
Park Sang-wook, general manager of TFH's Korean branch, said, "In an age where the evolution of AI makes it easy to imitate human behavior, security must go beyond the boundaries of firewalls and passwords."
"Existing authentication only asks whether the password is correct or whether the person can receive SMS, but does not verify whether the person is human," he said.
He further emphasized that "for technology to serve people, a new system that can universally prove humanity while protecting privacy is essential."
2025/10/16 10:59 KST
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