The threat was already real. The industry just hadn't named it yet. We didn't wait for consensus — we built the forensic standard.
Detection existed. Explainability didn't. That was the structural flaw — and it would define the next decade of digital trust. We started building before the market had language for the problem.
DuckDuckGoose is founded in the Netherlands. Designed from day one to produce forensic evidence, not probability labels. The architecture decision every competitor would eventually have to reverse-engineer.
Forensic institutes and national security agencies don't adopt technology on hype. They validated the methodology, stress-tested it against real-world attacks — then deployed it.
APIs, SDKs, on-prem. Engineered so detection disappears into the stack — invisible to users, impossible to bypass. Multimodal from the start: image, video, audio, documents.
When banks, neobanks, and IDV platforms needed to harden onboarding against synthetic identities, the integration was measured in hours. Not because it was simple — because the architecture was right from the start.
New explainability layers. Faster video pipelines. Deeper enterprise integrations. Anyone can flag a deepfake. We build the chain of evidence that auditors sign off on and regulators accept.
Identity is the new perimeter. We're the forensic layer inside it. Not a detection vendor — the trust infrastructure the ecosystem runs on.