Trueframe
Tell real photos from AI-generated ones
A forensic report with a plain-language verdict on whether an image is AI-generated or laundered — heuristic estimate, not a calibrated detector.
Drop your images here
or
Why check if an image is AI-generated?
AI-generated images now show up in ads, dating profiles, listings, news and scams — and they are getting harder to spot by eye. Before you trust, publish or buy based on a photo, Trueframe gives you a quick, private second opinion on whether it was likely created or altered by AI.
How it works
Drop an image and Trueframe gathers forensic evidence — signed C2PA provenance, a neural pixel-level AI detector that runs entirely in your browser, EXIF authenticity flags, durable-watermark hints and a sensor-noise heuristic — then weighs them into a per-signal and overall verdict. Signed provenance and the pixel detector are the strong signals; metadata only corroborates and sensor noise is context. It is a heuristic estimate, not a calibrated detector.
Frequently asked questions
How can you tell if an image is AI-generated?
Trueframe combines signed C2PA provenance, an in-browser neural pixel detector, camera-EXIF authenticity, durable-watermark hints and sensor-noise patterns into a plain-language verdict.
What is C2PA?
Content Credentials (C2PA) is a standard that cryptographically records how an image was created or edited, including whether AI was involved.
Is the verdict definitive?
No. It is a heuristic estimate, not a calibrated detector or legal proof — treat it as a signal, not proof.
Does my image get uploaded?
No. The analysis runs entirely in your browser.
Can it catch AI images that had their metadata removed?
Often yes: an in-browser neural detector reads the pixels themselves, so it can flag AI photos even after C2PA and metadata are stripped. Heavy re-encoding can erode that signal.
Does it detect AI illustrations, logos or graphics?
Its strength is photorealistic images. Purely synthetic graphics — logos, UI mockups, 3D renders, diagrams — are outside the detector's training and may read as real.