Skip to main content

Google’s AI detection tool is now available for anyone to try

Google announced via a post on X (formerly Twitter) on Wednesday that SynthID is now available to anybody who wants to try it. The authentication system for AI-generated content embeds imperceptible watermarks into generated images, video, and text, enabling users to verify whether a piece of content was made by humans or machines.

“We’re open-sourcing our SynthID Text watermarking tool,” the company wrote. “Available freely to developers and businesses, it will help them identify their AI-generated content.”

Recommended Videos

SynthID debuted in 2023 as a means to watermark AI-generated images, audio, and video. It was initially integrated into Imagen, and the company subsequently announced its incorporation into the Gemini chatbot this past May at I/O 2024.

The system works by encoding tokens — those are the foundational chunks of data (be it a single character, word, or part of a phrase) that a generative AI uses to understand the prompt and predict the next word in its reply — with imperceptible watermarks during the text generation process. It does so, according to a DeepMind blog from May, by “introducing additional information in the token distribution at the point of generation by modulating the likelihood of tokens being generated.”

By comparing the model’s word choices along with its “adjusted probability scores” against the expected pattern of scores for watermarked and unwatermarked text, SynthID can detect whether an AI wrote that sentence.

Here’s how SynthID watermarks AI-generated content across modalities. ↓ pic.twitter.com/CVxgP3bnt2

— Google DeepMind (@GoogleDeepMind) October 23, 2024

This process does not impact the response’s accuracy, quality, or speed, according to a study published in Nature on Wednesday, nor can it be easily bypassed. Unlike standard metadata, which can be easily stripped and erased, SynthID’s watermark reportedly remains even if the content has been cropped, edited, or otherwise modified.

“Achieving reliable and imperceptible watermarking of AI-generated text is fundamentally challenging, especially in scenarios where [large language model] outputs are near deterministic, such as factual questions or code generation tasks,” Soheil Feizi, an associate professor at the University of Maryland, told MIT Technology Review, noting that its open-source nature “allows the community to test these detectors and evaluate their robustness in different settings, helping to better understand the limitations of these techniques.”

The system is not foolproof, however. While it is resistant to tampering, SynthID’s watermarks can be removed if the text is run through a language translation app or if it’s been heavily rewritten. It is also less effective with short passages of text and in determining whether a reply based on a factual statement was generated by AI. For example, there’s only one right answer to the prompt, “what is the capital of France?” and both humans and AI will tell you that it’s Paris.

If you’d like to try SynthID yourself, it can be downloaded from Hugging Face as part of Google’s updated Responsible GenAI Toolkit.

Andrew Tarantola
Andrew Tarantola is a journalist with more than a decade reporting on emerging technologies ranging from robotics and machine…
OpenAI’s Advanced Voice Mode can now see your screen and analyze videos
Advanced Santa voice mode

OpenAI's "12 Days of OpenAI" continued apace on Wednesday with the development team announcing a new seasonal voice for ChatGPT's Advanced Voice Mode (AVM), as well as new video and screen-sharing capabilities for the conversational AI feature.

Santa Mode, as OpenAI is calling it, is a seasonal feature for AVM, and offers St. Nick's dulcet tones as a preset voice option. It is being released to Plus and Pro subscribers through the website and mobile and desktop apps starting today and will remain so until early January. To access the limited-time feature, first sign in to your Plus or Pro account, then click on the snowflake icon next to the text prompt window.

Read more
OpenAI’s Sora doesn’t feel like the game-changer it was supposed to be
Sora's interpretation of gymnastics

OpenAI has teased, and repeatedly delayed, the release of Sora for nearly a year. On Tuesday, the company finally unveiled a fully functional version of the new video-generation model destined for public use and, despite the initial buzz, more and more early users of the release don't seem overly impressed. And neither am I.

https://x.com/OpenAI/status/1758192957386342435

Read more
Google’s new Gemini 2.0 AI model is about to be everywhere
Gemini 2.0 logo

Less than a year after debuting Gemini 1.5, Google's DeepMind division was back Wednesday to reveal the AI's next-generation model, Gemini 2.0. The new model offers native image and audio output, and "will enable us to build new AI agents that bring us closer to our vision of a universal assistant," the company wrote in its announcement blog post.

As of Wednesday, Gemini 2.0 is available at all subscription tiers, including free. As Google's new flagship AI model, you can expect to see it begin powering AI features across the company's ecosystem in the coming months. As with OpenAI's o1 model, the initial release of Gemini 2.0 is not the company's full-fledged version, but rather a smaller, less capable "experimental preview" iteration that will be upgraded in Google Gemini in the coming months.

Read more