Google Messages may soon make it easy to tell when your friends are sharing AI imagery
Affiliate links on Android Authority may earn us a commission. Learn more. Every day, weโre presented with an onslaught of images: browser ads, social media, news feeds โ theyโre everywhere. And increasingly, thereโs a good chance that a plurality of those images might involve s
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Every day, weโre presented with an onslaught of images: browser ads, social media, news feeds โ theyโre everywhere. And increasingly, thereโs a good chance that a plurality of those images might involve some kind of AI manipulation , if not full-on generation. While tools to recognize such pictures for what they are exist, oftentimes using them is far too manual of a process. But now it looks like Google could be streamlining how we access these solutions, especially when it comes to images sent through the Messages app.
Systems like SynthID let us scan media for AI content, and last year Google even baked SynthID into Gemini to make it easy to access across your device. Another of these is the Coalition for Content Provenance and Authenticityโs (C2PA) Content Credentials system, and Google Messages appears to be getting ready to analyze imagery for C2PA credentials.
Today weโre looking at version messages.android_20260611_04_RC00.phone.openbeta_dynamic of Google Messages for Android, but developers have been laying the groundwork here across a few recent releases. While we havenโt yet been able to see this C2PA-aware tool in action, text strings within the app hint at whatโs coming:
It sounds like weโll find this accessible through the โView detailsโ option in the overflow menu youโll find after tapping on an image shared in a chat. Notably, it wonโt just be an all-or-nothing โthis is AI โ verdict, and the app is preparing to offer quite specific detail about the level of AI involvement. Here are some of the descriptions weโve already found:
It might be even nicer if we could just see this kind of analysis right in out chat, rather than having to pull up image details โ and who knows? Maybe Google could actually implement something just like that by the time this toolโs ready for a public release.
Even if it does mean a few taps, a quick way to learn about an imageโs provenance sounds like a big upgrade for Messages in this messy AI-everywhere world we now inhabit.
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