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Daphna Langer Is Building The Tesla of Rail, and This is Why You Should Pay Attention 

2026-04-24 16:00:55

For more than a century, freight rail has evolved around one dominant constraint: energy cost. From steam to coal to diesel, each generation of rail has been defined by the same underlying challenge: how to move massive freight loads while managing one of the industry’s largest and most persistent operating expenses.

Despite improvements in engine efficiency and logistics, energy has remained structurally difficult to reduce. In many rail systems, it can still account for up to ~20% of total operating costs. The result is an industry that has optimized around the edges, rather than fundamentally rethinking the system itself.

That is the problem Daphna Langer is now focused on solving.

As co-founder and CEO of Voltify, which was co-founded in 2024 with Alon Kessel, Langer is building what she describes as the next generation of rail energy infrastructure that is designed not to marginally improve trains, but to structurally reduce the cost of powering them.

A Founder Focused on System-Level Problems

Langer’s career has consistently gravitated toward large, entrenched inefficiencies.

Before Voltify, she co-founded Valor, where she worked on turning complex data systems into actionable business intelligence. Prior to that, she led Wisor, a freight technology startup that automated pricing workflows in an industry still heavily dependent on manual quoting and fragmented data systems.

Across both ventures, her focus remained consistent: identifying where outdated systems create unnecessary cost and friction, then rebuilding them with modern intelligence and automation.

Her experience expanded further as an Entrepreneur-in-Residence at J-Impact Fund and through advisory work with RepAir Carbon Capture, where she engaged directly with climate and energy infrastructure challenges. These roles reinforced a broader insight: while innovation in energy generation has accelerated, the systems that distribute and optimize energy, especially in industrial sectors, remain underdeveloped.

Rail became the clearest expression of that gap.

Rethinking the Next Generation of Rail

Rather than asking how to make trains incrementally more efficient, Voltify starts with a different question: what does the next generation of rail look like if energy is treated as a fully engineered system, rather than a fixed input cost?

Today, rail operators largely inherit energy inefficiencies as a given. Fuel is purchased, consumed, and accounted for as one of the largest line items in operating budgets. Optimization efforts tend to focus on marginal gains, slightly better engines, improved routing, or incremental fuel savings.

Voltify’s thesis challenges that structure entirely.

Instead of treating energy as a static cost, the company is building infrastructure that actively optimizes how energy is consumed across rail systems. The goal is to move from passive fuel consumption to a managed energy layer that reduces waste, improves efficiency, and unlocks meaningful cost compression at system scale.

This shift reframes rail not as a mechanical optimization problem, but as an energy architecture challenge.

Recognition and Industry Momentum

Langer’s work has begun to attract broader recognition. She was named to the Forbes 30 Under 30 list in the Energy and Green Tech category, highlighting her as part of a new wave of founders tackling foundational infrastructure problems in the energy transition.

The recognition reflects a growing awareness that decarbonization and efficiency gains will not come solely from new generation technologies, but also from redesigning how energy is consumed in legacy industrial systems.

Rail, in particular, represents one of the largest untapped opportunities in that shift.

Voltify’s Funding and Scaling Phase

As demand for infrastructure-level climate solutions increases, Voltify has entered a new stage of growth with recent funding aimed at accelerating product development and scaling deployment.

Unlike software-only climate startups, Voltify is operating in a deeply physical and capital-intensive category. Building a rail energy layer requires integration across energy systems, operational data, and real-world infrastructure constraints.

The new funding will support both engineering expansion and early deployments, allowing Voltify to move from system design into real-world validation with rail operators.

Investor interest reflects a broader shift in climate and infrastructure capital: a growing willingness to fund companies that tackle foundational inefficiencies rather than incremental improvements.

A Different Kind of “Tesla for Rail”

The comparison to Tesla is often used loosely in climate and infrastructure conversations, but in this case, it captures not the product itself, but the system-level ambition behind it.

Where Tesla redefined the vehicle, Voltify is attempting to redefine the energy layer behind freight rail entirely. If successful, the impact would not come from better trains, but from a fundamental reduction in one of rail’s largest and most persistent cost structures.

And that is the core of Langer’s bet: that the next era of rail innovation will not be defined by locomotives at all, but by the invisible energy systems that power them

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:::tip This story was distributed as a release by Jon Stojan under HackerNoon’s Business Blogging Program.

:::

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AI in Mobile Apps (But Done RIGHT): An iOS Developer’s Guide to Performance, Privacy

2026-04-24 13:48:34

Artificial intelligence has rapidly become a default expectation in modern mobile applications, yet its integration often remains superficial. Many applications label features as “AI-powered” while relying on basic heuristics or overusing cloud-based APIs without architectural consideration. On iOS, where performance, privacy, and responsiveness are critical, integrating AI effectively requires more than attaching a model to a feature. It demands careful decisions around execution environments, data flow, lifecycle management, and user experience. When implemented correctly, AI becomes an invisible layer that enhances interactions rather than a visible gimmick.

The iOS ecosystem provides a unique advantage for AI-driven applications through tight hardware and software integration. Frameworks such as Core ML, Vision, and Natural Language enable on-device inference, which reduces latency and improves privacy. However, the decision between on-device and cloud-based AI is not binary. It is a trade-off between performance, model complexity, energy consumption, and maintainability. A poorly chosen approach can lead to increased battery drain, inconsistent results, or degraded user experience under network constraints.

On-device inference is often the preferred choice for real-time features such as image classification, text recognition, and personalization. These operations benefit from low latency and offline availability. A typical implementation involves loading a compiled Core ML model and performing inference directly within the application lifecycle.

func classifyImage(_ image: UIImage) -> String? {
    guard let model = try? ImageClassifier(configuration: .init()) else { return nil }
    guard let buffer = image.toCVPixelBuffer() else { return nil }

    let prediction = try? model.prediction(image: buffer)
    return prediction?.label
}

This snippet demonstrates a synchronous classification flow where an image is converted into a pixel buffer and passed into a Core ML model. The result is immediately available without network dependency. While this approach is efficient, it requires careful memory handling. Loading large models repeatedly can increase memory pressure, so models are typically initialized once and reused. Additionally, preprocessing steps such as resizing and normalization should be optimized to avoid unnecessary CPU overhead.

Despite the advantages of on-device inference, there are cases where cloud-based AI remains necessary. Large language models, recommendation engines, and complex analytics often exceed the capabilities of mobile hardware. In such scenarios, the mobile client acts as an orchestrator, sending minimal context to backend services and rendering results efficiently. The challenge lies in balancing responsiveness with network dependency.

A common pattern involves asynchronous requests combined with structured concurrency. Instead of blocking the main thread, AI responses are fetched in parallel and integrated into the UI once available.

func generateSummary(for text: String) async -> String {
    await withTaskGroup(of: String?.self) { group in
        group.addTask { await fetchRemoteSummary(text) }
        group.addTask { await fetchLocalFallback(text) }

        for await result in group {
            if let result { return result }
        }
        return "Unavailable"
    }
}

This pattern demonstrates a hybrid approach where a remote AI service is combined with a local fallback mechanism. If the network request fails or is delayed, a lightweight on-device alternative ensures continuity. This strategy prevents AI features from becoming a bottleneck in the user experience. The key insight is that AI should degrade gracefully rather than fail abruptly.

Another critical aspect of AI integration in iOS applications is lifecycle management. AI operations often involve long-running tasks, especially when processing media or interacting with remote services. These tasks must align with the lifecycle of view controllers or SwiftUI views to avoid unnecessary resource retention. Structured concurrency helps manage this by tying tasks to specific scopes, but developers must still ensure that references are not retained beyond their intended lifecycle.

Task { [weak self] in
    guard let self else { return }
    let result = await processImage(self.currentImage)
    self.updateUI(with: result)
}

This pattern ensures that asynchronous AI processing does not retain the owning object unnecessarily. Without the weak capture, the task could outlive the view lifecycle, leading to memory retention and potential leaks. AI features, particularly those involving continuous updates such as live camera processing, must be tightly controlled to avoid excessive resource usage.

Performance optimization becomes even more critical when AI is involved. On-device models consume CPU, GPU, or Neural Engine resources depending on their configuration. Core ML allows specifying compute units, which determines how inference is executed. Selecting the appropriate compute unit can significantly impact performance and battery consumption.

let config = MLModelConfiguration()
config.computeUnits = .all

let model = try ImageClassifier(configuration: config)

Using all available compute units enables the system to leverage the Neural Engine when possible, providing faster inference with lower energy impact. However, not all devices support the same capabilities, so fallback strategies must be considered. Testing across multiple device classes is essential to ensure consistent behavior.

Data flow design also plays a crucial role in effective AI integration. Raw data should not be passed directly into models without preprocessing and validation. For example, text inputs should be normalized, filtered, and truncated to match model expectations. Similarly, image inputs should be resized and compressed to reduce processing overhead. These steps not only improve performance but also ensure more accurate predictions.

Beyond technical implementation, user experience considerations define whether AI features feel meaningful. AI should augment existing workflows rather than disrupt them. For instance, predictive suggestions should appear contextually and update dynamically without blocking user interactions. Latency must be minimized to maintain a sense of immediacy, especially in interactive features such as search or recommendations.

Privacy is another defining factor in iOS AI development. Apple’s ecosystem emphasizes on-device processing and minimal data sharing. Applications that rely heavily on cloud-based AI must justify data transmission and ensure compliance with privacy standards. Techniques such as data anonymization, tokenization, and selective data sharing can help mitigate risks. On-device models inherently provide a stronger privacy guarantee, making them preferable for sensitive use cases such as health or financial data.

The integration of AI also introduces challenges in testing and validation. Unlike deterministic logic, AI outputs can vary based on input distribution and model behavior. Testing strategies must account for variability and focus on evaluating outcomes rather than exact matches. This often involves defining acceptable ranges or confidence thresholds instead of strict assertions. Continuous monitoring in production becomes necessary to detect drift or unexpected behavior over time.

As AI capabilities evolve, maintainability becomes a long-term concern. Models may need to be updated, retrained, or replaced as requirements change. On iOS, this can be achieved through app updates or dynamic model downloads. Core ML supports loading models at runtime, enabling applications to adapt without requiring full releases. However, this introduces additional complexity in version management and compatibility.

A well-designed AI integration treats models as modular components rather than embedded logic. This separation allows independent iteration on AI features without impacting the core application. It also facilitates experimentation, where different models can be evaluated and swapped based on performance metrics.

The distinction between superficial AI integration and meaningful implementation lies in how seamlessly it fits into the application architecture. AI should not be treated as an isolated feature but as a layer that interacts with data, UI, and system resources cohesively. Decisions around execution environment, concurrency, memory management, and user experience must align to create a balanced system.

Mobile platforms, particularly iOS, impose constraints that make these decisions more critical. Limited memory, battery considerations, and strict lifecycle management require a disciplined approach. AI features that ignore these constraints often result in degraded performance, increased crashes, or poor user retention. Conversely, well-integrated AI enhances responsiveness, personalization, and overall usability without drawing attention to itself.

The future of AI in mobile applications is not defined by the number of features labeled as intelligent but by how effectively intelligence is embedded into everyday interactions. On iOS, this means leveraging on-device capabilities, designing for graceful degradation, and maintaining strict control over resources and lifecycles. When these principles are applied, AI transitions from a marketing term into a fundamental component of modern mobile engineering.

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Designing UX for Invisible Technology: Lessons from Sustainability Platforms in High-Traffic Venues

2026-04-24 13:46:55

There is a particular kind of design problem that nobody really prepares you for in school, and it is not really described in most design job requirements. It is the kind of problem where the technology you are designing for is, by its very nature, invisible; where the product is working in the background, tracking, measuring, or enabling something, and the only moment where the user really experiences it is through the little screen they are looking at while they are waiting in the concourse of a stadium, holding their reusable cup, and waiting for the match to start.

This is essentially the situation I found myself in when I joined a sustainability technology company in 2023 — one that helps organisations reduce single-use plastic waste by replacing it with tracked, reusable packaging systems.¹ The product I had to redesign is a consumer engagement tool accessed via a QR code printed on a reusable cup or product. No app download is required. The user scans, the interface loads in their browser, and within seconds they should be able to see their environmental impact, claim rewards, and engage with the brand they are interacting with.²

At the moment there were no established UX patterns for what we were trying to build. I had to invent the playbook while simultaneously building the product.

The Problem with Designing for a Product Nobody Sees

Before I even opened Figma, I had to understand why this current product wasn’t working. The problems were obvious: there was a lack of consistency in colour, placement issues, and formatting problems, as well as a general look and feel that just wasn’t quite right. But there was another, more interesting problem.

The product I was redesigning is what I would call invisible technology. It is made possible through sustainability infrastructure — cup tracking, data collection, and environmental calculations — but the user is only ever privy to a web-based application after scanning. For this interaction to occur, it is essential for the interface to do an enormous amount of heavy lifting within a very short span of time. It has to establish trust, convey value, and walk the user through an activity they have probably never performed before, all while competing with the noise of a packed stadium, a queue at the bar, and the general chaos of being at a live event.

The design at the time wasn't built to handle any of this and new users found it hard to understand the flow. Important features were hard to notice, nothing about it said "this is real, this is legitimate, this is worth your time". Because of this, it wasn't real. And if it wasn't real, users just wouldn't use it.

\ This is one particular failure mode that I think is not well understood in UX writing, and it is "the credibility gap of invisible technology." Users can't see the system behind the product. There are no physical indicators, no patterns of an interface, and no pre-existing brand recognition. The design has to be enough to establish trust. If it is confusing and unpolished, it is not just unhelpful; it is actively untrustworthy. A confusing interface does not just frustrate users in environments like these. It makes them question whether the whole thing is legitimate.

Starting Without a Playbook

One of the things I had to get comfortable with right away was that there weren’t any established patterns in UX design that matched what we were creating. Creating design patterns for sustainability engagement in a high-traffic, real-time environment wasn’t a problem that had been solved yet. The most similar design patterns I could find were those of gamification interfaces and loyalty programs, but those are generally being used in a completely relaxed environment, like a person sitting in their house scrolling through their rewards programs.

Existing ESG and sustainability tools in the market were, almost without exception, designed for specialists: quarterly reporting dashboards built for sustainability managers who had time, context, and training.³ None of these factors are present for the football stadium fan, who has just been handed this cup and is wondering what this QR code does.

So, I began with what I always begin with, even if there’s no template: paper. I filled several pages with sketches (yes, sketching on paper might be considered very old school but that is what I am most comfortable with) – layout ideas, flow alternatives, navigation structures. I wasn’t trying to solve the whole problem at once. I was trying to understand the constraints well enough to know which problems needed solving.

The constraints, as I saw them, were:

·         The user arrives with no prior knowledge of the product

·         The user is in a distracting environment

·         The user has scanned a QR code, so at least mildly interested, but not more than that

·         There is no way to explain the product before they are presented with it

·         The interface has to be usable by a first-time user, and by a tenth-time user

·         There is no app installation – everything has to work in a mobile browser

These constraints drove all of my decisions from that point forward.

The Design Principles I Built Around

Through working within these constraints, I was forced into a set of principles that I have continued to use in other projects since. I would like to share them with you not as a framework but as the conclusions I came to through making it work.

Simplicity is not optional; it is the product. In a high-traffic, high-distraction world, every extra click, every unclear prompt, every bit of visual noise is another reason to leave. I made a conscious decision early on that the product would have to feel almost intuitive; not dumbing it down but making it clear. The way in which the user would navigate through the levels of information would have to be intuitive; if it was not clear to a first-time user what to do within the first few seconds of loading the screen, it was not working.

Trust has to be visible. Since the technology isn’t, the design had to ensure the product felt real. This meant ensuring colour branding, typography, and the overall visual language felt considered and not assembled. I created new brand guidelines for the interface, not just applying the existing brand of the venue operator, but creating a flexible one that would stand up to real-world use with different clients, such as a football club, food festival, or hospitality bar.

First-timers and repeat users are not the same person. This might seem like an obvious statement, but it has significant implications for the design. First-timers need orientation. They need the interface to explain what this is and why it’s important before asking them to do anything. Repeat users need efficiency. They know what it is, and they need to get to their rewards or their impact data quickly. I had to balance the two without frustrating either user type.

Collaboration with developers is not up for negotiation. This is one aspect of the process that I want to highlight because, in my opinion, designers sometimes don’t fully appreciate the impact of the context of development on what is feasible. Working closely with the development team from the start meant that my choices were informed by what was feasible to build and deploy in the browser, without the need for an app install, and across the variety of devices the user would be holding. Design that looks good in Figma but fails dismally in the browser isn’t finished design. I worked closely with the team, and the final product was genuinely better for it.

What the Iteration Actually Looked Like

I want to be honest about this process, too, because I think there’s a tendency within design writing to present this process of iteration as easier than it actually is. The reality is that feedback came in waves, from multiple directions, and not all of it was easy to reconcile. Early feedback from the development team flagged technical constraints I had not fully accounted for in my initial layouts.

There were user issues, too, according to the client-facing team, where some of the elements I had given prominence to were actually not being used, while some of the elements I had not given prominence to were actually the ones being requested.

And then, of course, there was the feedback that came afterwards, the kind of feedback you only get when people are actually using the product for the first time, in an actual stadium.

This last category of feedback is the most valuable and the most difficult to simulate. The reason is that I couldn't conduct a formal usability test in this kind of environment prior to launch. What I could do was design conservatively for this "first-time user" scenario, make sure the most important actions were visually prominent, and then iterate based on what we learned after launch. This is not an ideal approach, but it is a realistic one given this kind of environment.

Each round of iteration informed the design system. Instead of just fixing isolated issues, we attempted to understand each piece of feedback as indicative of a larger trend: "this is a labelling issue," "this is a hierarchy issue," "this is a contrast issue," and so on. This approach is part of what made this product more stable over time.

Where It Ended Up

The redesigned interface is currently used across a range of venues and events, including Derby County Football Club, Notts County Football Club, Sheffield Food and Drink Festival, Electric Daisy, and various hospitality venues. Every reusable cup used in these football clubs’ stadiums contains the QR code for the interface. This means that every day of a football match, thousands of people are using a product I designed. The redesign proved successful not just in terms of usage, but also in terms of organisational credibility — it was incorporated into pitch decks, marketing materials, and the company website in a way that had not been possible before. My view is that a product that does not look credible is not helpful in securing the trust of partners, clients, or investors. One that does can be.

One further validation of this approach came from a partner company, a sustainability organisation based in Portugal, whose product had been tested at sustainability fairs and is now being rolled out across their stores, with plans to move into Spain. The fact that the design had to accommodate different languages, brands, and cultures was something I thought about from the very beginning, and this is partly why I developed a flexible design system rather than a rigid template.

What I Would Tell Other Designers

If you are working on a product where the tech is not really visible to the end user – sustainability platforms, IoT interfaces, background data systems – then here are the things I wish someone had told me before I started.

Constraints are more important than flows. The context in which a user is using your product – the environment, the mental state of the user, time of day, device – is more important than thinking about the flow of your product only. The constraints are your brief.

Trust is a design material. When you don't have physical design elements like a brand or a physical product to rely on, then the look and feel of your interface is doing a lot of trust-building work that you may not even realize.

Design for first-time users without punishing returning ones. These are not the same person and they need different things.

Get in the environment if you can. I designed this product for use in stadiums and at festivals. If you're designing for a physical environment, try to be in the environment, even if it's just to observe, not to test. It will change your assumptions in ways that no user persona document will.

Iteration is not failure, it's the work. The product I shipped looks nothing like my first sketches, and that's just the way it should be. The goal is to get to something that works.

Putting These Principles Into Practice

If you take nothing else from this piece, take these three questions and apply them to whatever you are currently working on. First: what does a first-time user see in the first five seconds, and is it enough to earn their trust? Not their engagement, not their enthusiasm — just their trust. If the answer is unclear, that is your first design problem. Second: have you mapped the real environment your user is in — not the idealised one — and have you designed for its actual constraints? Most interfaces are designed for calm, patient users on good Wi-Fi. Most real users are distracted, rushed, and sceptical. Design for who they actually are. Third: are your most important actions the most visually prominent ones? Not the ones you find most interesting, not the ones that are technically impressive — the ones your user needs most. These three questions will not solve every problem, but in my experience, if you can answer them honestly and design accordingly, you will have already solved the majority of them.

A Final Thought

There is something that I find interesting about designing for invisible technology. When it is successful, no one ever notices it. They look, it loads, they see how they're making an impact, they collect their reward, and then they're off with their evening. It is like it was never there at all.

For a designer, it is both the hardest thing to achieve and the most satisfying one. It means that it did its job; it got out of the way and let the thing that was really important, the sustainability behaviour, the impact on the environment, the relationship between people and the world around them, really come through.

We do not speak enough about designing for invisibility, but I think it is one of the most important skills we can build, particularly as our use of technology becomes further integrated into physical environments, such as smart venues, sustainable retail, or physical infrastructure. It is not just 'how do I make this easy to use?' but 'how do I make this so good, so natural, so right, that the user never has to think about the design at all?'

This, of course, remains the question I am still working on. I suspect I shall still be working on this question for some time to come.

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Is Your CEO a Deepfake? 5 Ways to Secure Your Business Against AI Scams

2026-04-24 13:45:41

The $25 million video call

The finance officer did everything right.

He joined the Zoom call. He recognised the CFO's face. He heard the familiar voice, the same cadence, the same informal tone from dozens of previous meetings. The CFO explained that the acquisition was moving faster than expected. The wire needed to go out before the end of business. Confidentiality was important. Move quickly.

He transferred $25 million to an account in Hong Kong.

But the bitter truth was that the CFO had never made that call. The face on screen was a deepfake. The voice was a clone stitched together from earnings calls and public interviews. Every pixel of that video was synthetic, and none of it glitched, flickered, or gave itself away.

That case is from 2024. In 2026, the tools that produced it are faster, cheaper, and more convincing than they were then. A report from the security firm Recorded Future found that real-time deepfake video generation has advanced to the point where frame-by-frame forensic artefacts — the artefacts detection tools relied on — are no longer reliably present in live injection attacks.

The threat has matured. Your procedures have not.

There is a phrase that gets repeated in corporate security briefings: "trust your gut." If something feels off, pause. If the request seems unusual, verify. That advice was never great, and in 2026, it is genuinely dangerous. Your gut reads faces and voices. Attackers know this. The attack is designed to satisfy exactly the signals your gut is trained to trust.

This is not a technology problem with a technology solution. It is a trust problem, and it requires a different kind of response.

How the scam actually works

The mechanics matter because most security teams are still preparing for the wrong version of this attack.

Voice cloning is no longer a resource-intensive operation.

Current tools can produce a convincing voice clone from as little as 15 to 30 seconds of source audio. That audio does not need to come from anywhere special. A CFO's earnings call excerpt on YouTube, a LinkedIn video, a podcast appearance, a company town hall recording posted internally — all of these are sufficient. The resulting clone reproduces not just pitch and tone but speech rhythm, filler words, and the specific way a person trails off at the end of a sentence. In a phone call or the audio track of a video call, it is indistinguishable from the real speaker to an untrained human ear.

Real-time video injection is now consumer software.

Tools like DeepFaceLive and its commercial equivalents allow an attacker to map a target's face over their own face during a live video call. This is not a post-production effect. It runs at frame rate, in real time, during an active Zoom or Teams session. The attacker points their camera at their own face. The software replaces it with the target's face. To the person on the receiving end, they are looking at their CFO.

The quality is not perfect under every condition, but it does not need to be. It needs to be good enough to pass a 20-minute video call with someone who has no particular reason to be suspicious, conducted under moderate pressure.

The deepfake is not the scam. Urgency is the scam.

These attacks combine synthetic identity with social engineering principles that are decades old. The deepfake removes the friction from impersonation, and it answers the question "but how do I know it's really you" before the target thinks to ask it. The actual manipulation is the manufactured urgency: the merger closes tonight, the regulator is waiting, this cannot go through normal channels, do not loop in the legal team. Deepfakes make authority claims credible. Urgency prevents verification. Together, they are remarkably effective against people who are otherwise security-aware.

At Bridge Infrastructure, a West African fintech processing payment data across four regulatory jurisdictions, this threat is concrete. A payment operations lead receives a video message that appears to be from the Group CFO. The CFO's face, voice, and mannerisms are accurate. The request is to approve an emergency float transfer of 50 million naira before the banking window closes. The operations lead has approved similar requests before. The CFO has called in for urgent approvals before. The existing controls are designed for external fraud, not internal impersonation.

The window from "that looks like the CFO" to "authorise the transfer" is the entire attack surface.

A visual representation of how deepfakes exploit the "Trust Gap"—blending familiar human features with frame-by-frame forensic artifacts to bypass traditional visual verification.

5 ways to secure your business against deepfake fraud

1. The out-of-band verification rule

Any financial request, access escalation, or sensitive instruction delivered over video or voice requires confirmation through a second, pre-registered channel before action is taken.

This is not complicated. It is a policy decision that most organizations have not made.

The rule works like this: if a request arrives over Zoom, confirm it via a direct phone call to a number already saved in your contacts. Not a number provided during the call. Not a number texted to you during the conversation. A number you already had, from a directory established before the call happened. If a request arrives via WhatsApp video, confirm via an internal ticketing system or a signal to a known device.

The key phrase is "pre-registered channel." Attackers who have compromised video can sometimes also compromise messaging channels opened during the conversation. The verification channel must predate the attack.

For Bridge Infrastructure, this means the payment operations team maintains a verified internal call list. Any transaction above a defined threshold, regardless of who appears to be requesting it, requires a callback confirmation before the authorization workflow begins. The policy is documented, trained, and enforced without exception for senior leadership requests. Especially for senior leadership requests.

The key to making these protocols stick is clarity. If your security policies are buried in dense legalese, they won't be followed under pressure (for more on this, see my guide on writing GRC documentation for non-technical stakeholders)

2. The challenge-response protocol

Before high-value transactions or sensitive access decisions, require the requester to provide a shared secret that was established in a prior, known-good interaction.

These are sometimes called safe words, abort codes, or verification phrases. The concept is borrowed from intelligence tradecraft. A shared secret is a piece of information that both parties know, but that could not be obtained from public sources or from observing the target's public-facing behaviour. It cannot be cloned from an earnings call. It cannot be synthesized from a LinkedIn profile.

Rotating these phrases on a regular schedule reduces the risk of compromise over time. The phrases should be stored offline or in a hardware-encrypted credential vault, not in a shared document accessible from a browser.

The challenge-response protocol defeats real-time impersonation because the attacker does not know what the phrase is. Even a perfect visual and audio deepfake of the CFO cannot produce a shared secret that was never given.

This control sounds low-tech. It is. That is exactly what makes it reliable.

3. Liveness detection and AI-based forensics

Technical controls exist that can identify synthetic video and audio with reasonable accuracy. They should be part of your detection layer, though not your only layer.

On the video side, photoplethysmography-based detection tools analyze pixel-level colour variation in facial skin to detect blood flow patterns. A real human face has a measurable, rhythmic variation in skin tone driven by the cardiac cycle. Deepfake video generated from a static source image or a cloned face often lacks this variation or produces it inconsistently. Tools from vendors including Microsoft, Sensity AI, and Reality Defender apply variations of this analysis in real time.

On the audio side, voice anti-spoofing models are trained to detect the specific artefacts that voice synthesis introduces. These artefacts are subtle and not audible to a human, but they appear consistently in the signal's spectral features.

None of these tools is infallible. Adversarial deepfake generation increasingly targets known detection weaknesses. The posture here should be: technical detection as one layer of a multi-layer defence, not as the primary control. A liveness detection flag should trigger the out-of-band verification protocol, not automatically block a transaction.

Organizations operating at scale should evaluate integrating liveness detection into their video conferencing stack and their call recording analysis pipeline. The investment is proportionate to the transaction volumes and authorization authority levels at risk.

4. Zero Trust identity for internal video

The Zero Trust framework, codified in NIST SP 800-207, is built on a single operating assumption: no actor, device, or session should be trusted by default, regardless of where the request originates.

Most organizations apply Zero Trust to network access. Very few apply it to identity claims made during video or voice sessions.

The shift required here is conceptual. Stop treating a person's face and voice as identity verification. Start treating the device they are calling from, and the hardware token or certificate bound to that device, as the trust anchor.

In practice, this means requiring device-bound authentication before any session in which sensitive decisions will be made. If the CFO's laptop or registered mobile device is not the source of the session request, the session does not carry the CFO's authorization level. The CFO's face appearing in the video frame is, by itself, insufficient.

This is a more significant architectural change than the previous controls, but it is the right long-term direction. For organizations implementing Zero Trust progressively, high-value authorization sessions are a logical starting point for applying device-bound identity requirements.

5. Deepfake simulation drills

Phishing simulation has been a standard component of security awareness training for years. The logic is straightforward: people learn to recognize attacks better when they have experienced a safe version of one.

The same logic applies to deepfake attacks. An employee who has never encountered a synthetic face in a realistic business context is not prepared to identify one under pressure. An employee who has been part of a controlled deepfake drill, who has experienced the moment of "that seemed real," is better calibrated for the actual event.

Authorized deepfake simulation programs are beginning to emerge as a category in security awareness training. The structure mirrors phishing simulations: a controlled attack is run against a defined group of employees, the responses are tracked, and the debrief is educational rather than punitive.

For Bridge Infrastructure, this would mean running a simulated CFO authorization request using a deepfake model trained on publicly available footage, targeting the payment operations team, and using the results to identify gaps in protocol adherence rather than to evaluate individual judgment.

The goal is not to catch people making mistakes. The goal is to build muscle memory for the verification steps so that those steps happen automatically when the real attack occurs.

Where this is going: cryptographic identity

The five controls above are practical and deployable today. They address the symptoms of a deeper structural problem: in the current communications infrastructure, there is no reliable way to prove that a face on a screen belongs to the person it appears to be.

The industry is working on this, but the solutions are not yet at deployment scale.

The Content Authenticity Initiative (CAI) and the C2PA standard represent one direction. C2PA is a technical specification that embeds cryptographic provenance data into media files at the point of capture. A video recorded on a C2PA-compliant camera carries a signed attestation of when it was recorded, on what device, and whether it has been modified. This does not solve real-time impersonation, but it creates a verifiable chain of custody for recorded media used in business contexts.

Decentralized identity (DID) represents a longer-term architectural answer. The W3C DID specification describes a method for creating self-sovereign digital identifiers that are cryptographically verifiable without reliance on a centralized authority. In a DID-enabled transaction authorization workflow, the CFO would not prove identity by appearing on video. They would prove their identity by signing the authorization request with a private key bound to their verified credential. A synthetic face cannot produce that signature.

The honest framing for West African enterprise contexts, including organizations like Bridge Infrastructure, is that neither C2PA nor DID is deployed at scale in this environment today. The regulatory infrastructure, device ecosystem, and vendor support required for widespread adoption is still developing. Organizations in these markets are not waiting for cryptographic identity to become standard. They are operating in the present, with present-day controls.

That gap between where the technology is heading and where most organizations currently stand is not a reason for paralysis. It is a reason to build the procedural and cultural controls now, so that the transition to cryptographic verification can be made without abandoning everything that came before.

Beyond "seeing is believing"

The security conversation around deepfakes tends to focus on detection: how do you identify a fake face, how do you catch a synthetic voice, what tool flags the anomaly.

Detection matters. But detection is a reactive posture, and it puts the entire weight of defence on a single moment of recognition under pressure.

The more durable defence is cultural. It is an organization that has decided, at the policy level, that no visual or audio identity claim is sufficient on its own to authorize a sensitive action. It is a finance team that has practiced the pause, the callback, and the challenge phrase enough times that these steps are reflexive rather than deliberate. It is a security program that treats the gap between "that looks real" and "that is real" as the exact space where risk lives.

The most dangerous thing a business can have is a confident workforce that trusts what it sees. The most secure thing it can have is a practised habit of verification, applied without exception, especially when everything looks familiar.

The CFO's face on that Zoom screen looked right. The voice sounded right. The context made sense. And $25 million left the account before anyone thought to call back.

That is the lesson. Not about technology. About process.

Build the process now, before the call comes.

How Tri-Merge Reduces Credit Uncertainty

2026-04-24 13:42:26

When someone decides it is time for a mortgage, lenders use several metrics about an individual to determine eligibility and reliability. They review a wide range of factors to judge the overall safety of the loan over time. This process helps to not only ensure investor trust but to also have an accurate snapshot of the applicant’s creditworthiness. For this reason, many professionals in this space consider the tri-merge credit report to be the best standard for assessing risk and determining borrower eligibility. \n

The tri-merge approach uses credit information from all three major bureaus to determine different factors about the candidate, generally relying on the median score of the three. This creates a balanced and comprehensive view of financial behavior. In contrast, using only one bureau or even two, known as a bi-merge approach, can result in an incomplete or inconsistent profile. These gaps can influence not only whether a loan is approved, but also the interest rate and general terms of the loan. As a result, alternatives to tri-merge reporting are often viewed as less dependable and more susceptible to error than a system that incorporates all of the data into one snapshot.

\ Differences between credit bureau scores can be very significant, especially when one or several are omitted from a report. Research has found that leaving out just one report can change a borrower’s score by 10 points or more. Additionally, nearly 35% of consumers have score variations of at least 10 points between bureaus, 18% experience differences of 20 points or more and around 7% see gaps of 40 points or higher. These are serious discrepancies, as for borrowers in the mid-range of the credit spectrum, just a 20-point difference can shift them into a different pricing category. So many Americans fall into this range, putting them at risk for a lasting financial impact, potentially adding thousands of dollars over the time period of the mortgage.

\ “Score-shopping” is another issue that borrowers and lenders grapple with when it comes to credit determination. This phenomenon occurs when borrowers or lenders are selective when choosing which credit score to put forth, often choosing the most favorable score of the set. Although this strategy on the surface seems as if it would save money for individuals, it often only provides a short-term advantage. Looking at the bigger picture, it can lead to overall issues in the lending market, causing a miscalculation of risk and inflated scores. In response to these negative effects, lenders often respond by tightening standards, making it harder for all buyers across the country to qualify for future loans.

\ The fixed benchmark of a “700” credit score has been considered standard in the industry and acts as a dividing line for loan terms. However, these thresholds are more often than not a poor representation of individual circumstances. They do not address the inconsistencies that often exist across credit reports, and oversimplify the evaluation process. Most importantly, these universal standards do not best reflect each borrower’s financial standing across the board. This is why using the tri-merge method offers advantages for both borrowers and lenders, as it provides a more accurate representation of credit history, reduces the chance for manipulation and creates a more reliable system.

The Difference Between Making Contact and Making an Impression

2026-04-24 13:38:55

\ Contemporary networking has eliminated nearly all the obstacles to the sharing of information. A LinkedIn scan, an X QR code, a quick follow on X, or a shared contact over a conference app can convert a short conversation into a long-lasting online relationship in a few seconds. This is supposed to be simpler to establish professional relationships on paper.

\ In practice, it has done something else. It has made contact effortless without making people more memorable. Professionals now leave events with packed inboxes, long contact lists, and dozens of new names they barely remember. The problem is no longer access. It is recall.

\ That shift matters because networking is often judged by the wrong measures. People count new connections, exchanged details, or profile follows. Those actions can create the appearance of progress, but they reveal little about whether a real impression was made. A person can be easy to reach and still easy to forget. In many professional settings, that is exactly what happens.

\ Even the tools built around presentation reflect this gap. Someone may use a business cards to prepare for an event, but a polished layout alone does not make an interaction memorable. What lasts is not the exchange of information itself, but whether the person left behind a clear reason to be remembered.

Why exchanging details carries less weight now

Contact sharing used to feel more deliberate. It required a pause in the interaction. Someone wrote down a number, handed over a printed reference, or made a more conscious choice to continue the conversation later. That small amount of effort gave the exchange some value of its own.

\ Now the process is built for speed. Event apps, social platforms, public profiles, and search tools make people easy to locate. That convenience solves one problem, but it also changes the meaning of the exchange. When contact becomes frictionless, it becomes easier to do without much thought.

\ That is why so many event connections feel thin after the fact. The person is technically saved, but the moment itself does not hold much weight. A record exists, yet the interaction never becomes distinct enough to survive the rest of the day. In a packed conference hall or startup event, that happens again and again.

Why so many conversations blur together

Majority of professionals are not neglected since they are incompetent or unappreciated. They are swept away since so many introductions have a similar sound.

\ During conferences and meetups, individuals tend to talk about their work in very general, smooth terminology that might be applicable to dozens of other people in the room. Titles become vague. Company descriptions are redundant. Discussions are conducted in patterns.

\ Memory does not work well under those conditions. It needs something clear to attach to. That could be a sharp description of what someone does, a direct point of view, a specific problem they solve, or a visual detail strong enough to bring the conversation back later. Without that, one interaction starts to merge with the next.

\ Follow-up messages cannot always repair this. A message may confirm that two people met, but it cannot automatically restore the context that made the meeting matter. The name may look familiar while the conversation remains hazy. This is where many professional interactions lose their value. The contact remains available, but the reason to continue has already weakened.

\ In that sense, networking problems often begin before the follow-up stage. The first interaction was never defined well enough to leave a clean impression.

What people tend to remember

People rarely remember the person who said the most. They usually remember the person who was easiest to place later. That comes down to clarity.

\ An introduction that is clear provides the other person something to hold on to. It describes the work in a manner that is concrete as opposed to bombastic. It forms an easy mental catalogue that can be revisited at a later time without toil. Way more helpful than a lengthy explanation full of industry jargon.

\ Presentation matters in the same way. When someone’s message, tone, and visual identity feel aligned, the interaction becomes easier to recall. Nothing feels random. The person seems defined rather than scattered. That alone can separate one conversation from a dozen others that were technically similar but harder to place.

\ This usually makes certain professionals leave more of an impression without attempting to take over a room. Their worth is clearer to comprehend. Their task is more simple to explain. Their appearance is logically coherent. Individuals might forget all the details, but they do not forget all, thus knowing who that individual was.

Why physical cues still have a role

Digital connections are efficient, but they disappear into systems built for volume. A saved contact joins hundreds of others. A new message lands in an inbox that is already crowded. The relationship is there, but does not last long.

\ Physical cues act in different ways. They remain in the real world. They may reappear in the future on a desk, a notebook or a bag. That second encounter can help restore the context of a brief conversation. In a busy event environment, even that small advantage can matter.

\ Still, physical materials only help when they support recognition. A forgettable design does not become useful just because it is printed. If it looks generic and says little about the person behind it, it will disappear in the same way as any ignored digital contact.

\ That is where execution matters. Some professionals use a business card maker to put together something quickly before an event, which can help with speed and structure. But the tool is only part of the process. If the final result does not reflect a clear identity, it will not do much to strengthen recall.

Where presentation usually breaks down

The most common mistake is not lack of effort. It is lack of focus. Many professionals either strip their materials down until nothing stands out or overload them with so much detail that no one knows where to look. Both approaches weaken memory.

\ A good presentation is less about saying more and more about choosing what deserves emphasis. A strong physical touchpoint should help someone reconnect the item they are holding with the person they met. It should not read like a compressed biography. It should carry enough identity to trigger recognition.

\ That is the reason why the finest ones tend to seem controlled. The design is evident. The chain of command is logical. The graphical language is equal to the individual or business. Although one may employ a tool to make the design process easier, the actual distinction lies in the design choices made behind the design, rather than the platform.

\ Individuals are more aware of such decisions than they would acknowledge. They do not necessarily research all the details, but they note whether something is rushed, generic, cluttered or clear. Those are memory shaping signals. They influence the replacement or specificity of the interaction.

Why being remembered matters more than being reachable

Professional opportunities do not move forward because contact details exist somewhere. They move forward because a person left behind enough clarity to be remembered later. A future client, investor, partner, or employer is more likely to act when they can place the person quickly and understand why the earlier interaction mattered.

\ That is why reach alone is no longer a strong advantage. Nearly everyone is reachable now. Profiles are searchable. Contact channels are open. Connection is easy. What is scarce is recognition.

\ Making contact still matters. It opens the possibility of a future conversation. But contact on its own does not carry much weight if the original interaction fades as soon as the event ends. In the end, the people who benefit most from networking are not simply the easiest to find. They are the ones who are easiest to remember.