Blockchain

ceτi AI Secures $80M of NVIDIA GPUs and Hardware to Expand Global AI Infrastructure Network by 25x

Vancouver, Canada, June 11th, 2024, Chainwire

ceτi AI is proud to announce an extended purchase agreement with Cedarcross International Technologies, Inc. for three additional high-performance computing (HPC) servers, each equipped with 8 NVIDIA H100 Tensor Core GPUs, plus an option to purchase an additional 200 identical HPC servers. The agreement marks the completion of ceτi AI’s pilot-scale installation in British Columbia, and opens the door to a 25x expansion of the ceτi AI Global Infrastructure Network with additional GPU and server allocation through Q3, 2024. 

The new servers, powered by NVIDIA’s most advanced H100 GPUs, are expected to arrive within approximately 45 days, further boosting the network’s capacity to support a broad range of AI application development and research. The firm’s pilot installation presents a state-of-the-art solution for web3 protocols, independent development teams, and advanced AI research teams in an 8-server, 64 GPU scalable unit that can be expanded linearly and indefinitely.

In addition to the network’s immediate expansion, the agreement also includes an option to purchase up to 200 identical HPC servers from Cedarcross through September 30th, 2024, underscoring both firms’ commitment to sustained growth and technological advancement in the decentralized AI space. ceτi AI has identified hyperscale data center candidate sites for the additional servers in Montreal, New Jersey, and Santa Clara, and is now in the process of securing investment for their purchase, installation, and initial operation. 

“We’re seeing unprecedented demand from institutional developers, independent researchers, and blockchain protocols for the physical chip and server infrastructure set to power the coming Age of Artificial Intelligence. Deploying the enormous physical infrastructure for decentralized AI requires strong relationships, world-class talent, and deep cooperation in pursuit of our common goal. We’re proud to work with Cedarcross as a valued partner that brings all of these qualities to the table,” said Dennis Jarvis, CEO of ceτi AI.

About Cedarcross

Cedarcross International Technologies Inc. is an investee company of Alset Capital Inc., a publicly traded Canadian company listed on the TSX Venture exchange. Cedarcross specializes in providing low-cost access to cutting-edge, high-performance computing hardware, primarily powered by NVIDIA’s advanced H100 chips. 

About ceτi AI

ceτi AI is at the forefront of the decentralized artificial intelligence (dAI) movement. Committed to innovation and accessibility, ceτi AI develops globally distributed, high-performance, scalable AI infrastructure designed to power the next generation of AI development worldwide. ceτi AI was founded in March of 2024 by long-time industry leaders Dennis Jarvis (CEO), Aaron Smith-Hayes (CTO), Austin Spencer (CFO), and Tony Evans (Chief Strategy Officer). 

For more information about ceτi AI and our initiatives, users can visit http://taoceti.ai

Users can follow ceτi AI on X, Telegram, and Discord for the latest updates and community discussions.

Contact

CEO
Dennis Jarvis
ceτi AI
[email protected]

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Deepfake Fraud Doubles Down: 49% of Businesses Now Hit by Audio and Video Scams, Regula’s Survey Reveals

2024-09-30T11:00:00Z

RESTON, Va., Sept. 30, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- In 2024, every second business globally reported incidents of deepfake fraud, revealing a growing trend in AI-related crimes over the past two years. Meanwhile, fraud involving fake or modified documents now outpaces AI-generated scams. These are the first findings from a new survey* “The Deepfake Trends 2024” commissioned by Regula, a global developer of forensic devices and identity verification solutions.

Regula’s survey data shows a significant rise in the prevalence of video deepfakes, with a 20% increase in companies reporting incidents compared to 2022**. While 29% of fraud decision-makers across Australia, France, Germany, Mexico, Turkey, UAE, UK, and the USA reported encountering video deepfake fraud in 2022, this year’s data — covering the USA, UAE, Mexico, Singapore, and Germany — shows this figure has surged to 49%. This sharp increase across the revised cohort underscores the growing challenge of video deepfakes and their continued threat to businesses.
Audio deepfakes are also on the rise, with a 12% increase compared to 2022 survey data.

Identity fraud tactics

Capture: The 12% rise in audio deepfake incidents and the 20% rise in video deepfake incidents from 2022 to 2024 highlight the need for enhanced detection and prevention measures.

The survey also reveals industrial and regional differences regarding companies’ experience with deepfake threats. For example, audio deepfakes prevail over video ones among the three of the surveyed sectors, including Financial Services (51%), Aviation (52%), and Crypto (55%). At the same time, Law Enforcement (56%), Technology (57%) and FinTech (57%) are reporting more face video scams.

The UAE and Singapore show higher susceptibility to deepfake fraud, with 56% of businesses in the UAE experiencing video deepfakes and 56% of businesses in Singapore encountering audio deepfakes. This is above the global average. In contrast, Mexico reported the lowest impact, with only 35% and 38% of businesses encountering video and audio deepfakes, respectively.

Old threats still persist

While video deepfakes are seeing the biggest jump over the two-year period (+20%), all other identity-related fraud has also grown, and some of its forms are more common than AI-generated scams.

As Regula’s survey shows, 58% of businesses globally have experienced identity fraud in the form of fake or modified documents. This happens to be the top identity fraud method for Mexico (70%), the UAE (66%), the US (59%), and Germany (59%). This implies that not only do businesses have to adapt their verification methods to deal with new threats, but they also are forced to combat old threats that continue to pose a significant challenge.

Interestingly, in a country more exposed to deepfakes, Singapore, this “traditional” threat is much lower than in the world at large: only 43% of businesses there reported having dealt with fake or tampered IDs.

“Our latest survey demonstrates that AI-generated identity fraud has become an everyday reality. The surge in deepfake incidents over the two-year period of our survey leaves businesses no choice but to adapt and rethink their current verification practices. Deepfakes are becoming increasingly sophisticated, and traditional methods are no longer enough. What we think may work well is the liveness-centric approach, a robust procedure that involves checking the physical characteristics of both individuals and their documents; in other words, verifying biometrics and ID hardcopies in real-time interactions. This is what we adhere to in our R&D and what we recommend that our customers do to protect themselves,” says Ihar Kliashchou, Chief Technology Officer at Regula.

Stay tuned for further insights as we continue to analyze and release more data on deepfake fraud. We’ll provide key updates to keep you informed and prepared for emerging threats.

Additional resources:

*The research was initiated by Regula and conducted by Sapio Research in August 2024 using an online survey of 575 business decision-makers across the Financial Services (including Traditional Banking and FinTech), Crypto, Technology, Telecommunications, Aviation, Healthcare, and Law Enforcement sectors. The respondent geography included Germany, Mexico, the UAE, the US, and Singapore.

**After aligning the 2024 survey data with the 2022 cohort for a direct comparison, it reveals that 49% of companies experienced both audio and video deepfakes, up from 37% and 29%, respectively, in 2022. However, the unadjusted 2024 survey — which includes a larger sample size and new regions such as Singapore, in place of countries like Australia and Turkey — indicates that 50% of companies were affected by both types of deepfakes.

About Regula

Regula is a global developer of forensic devices and identity verification solutions. With our 30+ years of experience in forensic research and the most comprehensive library of document templates in the world, we create breakthrough technologies for document and biometric verification. Our hardware and software solutions allow over 1,000 organizations and 80 border control authorities globally to provide top-notch client service without compromising safety, security, or speed. Regula has been repeatedly named a Representative Vendor in the Gartner® Market Guide for Identity Verification.

Learn more at www.regulaforensics.com.

Contact:
Kristina – [email protected]

A photo accompanying this announcement is available at https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/59658107-89ca-4806-956c-853e8dfaad3e


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