Resemble AI, a generative AI security company focused on defending organisations against deepfake and synthetic media attacks, has secured a new round of capital to accelerate its platform development and expand its global footprint.
The business has raised $13m in strategic funding. Participants in the round include Google’s AI Future Fund, Okta Ventures, Taiwania Capital, Gentree Fund, IAG Capital Partners, Berkeley Frontier Fund and KDDI. The company said this latest raise brings its total venture funding to $25m to date.
Resemble AI specialises in securing enterprise generative AI from creation through to distribution. Its technology is designed to help organisations address an emerging category of cyber risk, where manipulated audio, video and images can enable crimes ranging from financial fraud and brand impersonation to corporate espionage.
According to the company, the funding will be used to scale its AI detection platform, strengthen product development, and support international expansion. Resemble AI said the capital will help organisations “protect their people, brand, and revenue from deepfake threats” by providing more advanced multimodal threat detection.
The company has developed two core products capable of identifying AI-generated content in real time. Its DETECT-3B Omni product is described as an enterprise deepfake detection model achieving 98% accuracy across more than 40 languages and supports threat detection across audio, video, images and text. Its Intelligence model aims to provide enhanced explainability in content analysis, surfacing observable anomalies and offering natural-language commentary on suspected synthetic media.
Resemble AI said this investment is significant due to the level of partnership involved. The business noted that investors are integrating its technology into existing identity and security platforms, creating what it describes as immediate commercial routes to market and access to a range of enterprise environments internationally.
Resemble AI added that deepfake cyber crime is accelerating rapidly. The company cited figures stating that deepfake-related fraud caused $1.56bn in global losses in 2025, with generative AI expected to enable up to $40bn in fraud losses in the US alone by 2027.
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