A video pops up on X: Norman Reedus and Keanu Reeves, just two guys chatting and laughing like old pals. In the comments, someone writes: ‘At first I thought it was AI.” Well, bro, bad news… That flicker of doubt is your brain picking up on the uncanny valley. And, of course, after feeling even the slightest piece of doubt, you’d better run the video through our AI video detector. Because who else can tell you if the video is actually real or fake.
We analyzed the ‘bromance’ footage. The result? A 60% AI-generated score. That means while there might be real elements here, significant portions, like facial expressions, lip sync, or even the setting, have been digitally altered or AI-generated. The AI video checker flagged subtle mismatches: a laugh that doesn’t quite reach the eyes, lighting that shifts minutely between shots, and a conversational flow that feels just a little… off.
Source: Original post from X(Twitter)
It’s (at least partially) AI-generated. Our AI video detector scored it 60% AI. While elements may be real, significant digital manipulation makes it unreliable as genuine off-the-cuff footage.
It’s that eerie sensation when something looks almost human, but not quite causing discomfort or suspicion. It’s exactly what you might feel when encountering a fake video or image generated artificially. That gut feeling is your first signal to open the isFake AI video checker and analyze the clip.
Trust your instinct, then back it up with technology. Use our free AI video detector for a clear, percentage-based video authenticity check. In the battle against deepfakes, your gut and our detector make a powerful team.