New Truth Machine App Detects Lies
Bruce Kasanoff

New Truth Machine App Detects Lies

The new Truth Machine app alerts you when a colleague, vendor or friend is lying to you. Analyzing both audio and video images from a face-to-face conversation or video chat, it identifies potential deceit. The app's founders claim that the app can detect 99% of all lies.

I'm lying.

This app doesn't exist, yet. But for the sake of this article, let's assume it will exist in the next few years. Let's imagine that you - and everyone else - will be able to detect all lies.

So when your boss tells you, "Great job!" you will instantly know if he is lying.

When a vendor swears to you that she is offering you the lowest possible price, you will know when that is not true.

Even worse, if your significant other claims to be working late at the office, you will know when that statement is false.

My intention isn't to make predictions about the pace of technological change. It's simply to challenge myself - and you - to consider the possibility that lying may soon become nearly impossible.

Even if you are skeptical about the pace of technological development, I urge you to set that skepticism aside for a minute and consider this:

What if lying becomes futile?

Pamela Meyer, author of Liespotting, points out that you don't need an app to spot deception. Our faces, voices and actions offer many clues whether or not we are telling the truth. With focus and practice, anyone can learn to detect lies.

For example, Meyer's web site points out that:

From frowns to smiles, we typically reveal true feelings evenly on both sides of the face. Just like a picture hanging perfectly plumb on a wall, one’s face looks its most natural when balanced. Six of the seven core emotions are displayed genuinely with symmetrical expressions on the face. What this means is that if a colleague shows signs of surprise on just one side of her face, chances are she already knew what you just told her.

I'm just taking this one step further, and speculating about what would happen if liespotting techniques were automated.

In many LinkedIn articles, the comments are an interesting follow on to the post; in this one, your comments are front and center. Rather than try to answer this question myself, I'd like to suggest that it will be far more enlightening to solicit all your ideas, from a wide cross-section of countries, industries and ages.

If, as I hope, this article generates a lively discussion, I will publish a second piece that highlights the most insightful comments.

Here are some questions you might want to address:

  • How will relationships change when tactful white lies are no longer possible? What if, when your spouse asks if s/he looks fat, you have no choice but to be honest?
  • Will complete honesty make business relationships more or less compassionate? 
  • How will each of us need to alter our thoughts and actions when we get 100% accurate feedback?
  • What would the transition be like, as such an app was first announced, then available, then widely adopted? How would you feel about a person who refused to talk with you while you had the app running?

You might also like my latest Forbes article:

Bruce Kasanoff is a ghostwriter for entrepreneurs. Learn more at Kasanoff.com. He is the author of How to Self-Promote without Being a Jerk.

 

 

David Gautham

Mobile App Developer | Salesforce Developer

9 年

exactly nice machine apps to detects lies :)

回复
Jennifer Ashley

Fulltime Mother at Ashley Household

9 年

A few thoughts/ reactions I had in reading this... Some people lie to themselves more than they lie to others. Even if we had this technology the colleague who says "I'll get you that report tomorrow" and then forgets to do it, is still as unreliable as they were before. Just because someone isn't telling a lie doesn't mean they can be trusted. You ask about "tactful white lies"; let's not use honesty as an excuse for being rude. The question "do I look fat" (if the answer is yes) can be answered both tactfully and honestly... "that outfit isn't the most flattering" "I like your blue dress better." I once had a co-worker ask me if I loved their new shoes (which they were very proud of and which I thought were ugly). I responded that I thought they were funky and fun, which was true. I've always made it a priority to be honest with those around me, so having something that keeps me accountable to that would not be an issue. What I would possibly find issue with is, as a society we are already relying so heavily on technology for communication. Would this be another step in depersonalizing relationships and relying to much on technology? I might not be as accurate as technology, but I'd rather look someone in the eye and decide if I trust them than watch my phone to see if they are telling the truth.

回复

要查看或添加评论,请登录

Bruce Kasanoff的更多文章

  • Mountain Minute: Create Your Career Portfolio

    Mountain Minute: Create Your Career Portfolio

    In 2021, April Rinne wrote a wonderful article in Harvard Business Review: Why You Should Build a “Career Portfolio”…

  • Beyond the Ego: The Intelligence You're Ignoring

    Beyond the Ego: The Intelligence You're Ignoring

    Hiroo Onoda, a Japanese soldier, continued fighting for nearly 30 years after World War II ended, remaining in the…

    11 条评论
  • Mountain Minute: The Wisdom of Being "Dumb"

    Mountain Minute: The Wisdom of Being "Dumb"

    Have you ever met a CEO who aspires to be the dumbest person in the room? I have. My friend Garry Ridge, former…

    23 条评论
  • Distill the Real You: Ignoring Obvious Gifts

    Distill the Real You: Ignoring Obvious Gifts

    I just came across this photo from when I was a grad student at The Wharton School. That's me in the foreground…

    12 条评论
  • Mountain Minute: I Waited a Year to Publish This

    Mountain Minute: I Waited a Year to Publish This

    BACKGROUND: This is a portion of a conversation I had almost one year ago with the AI system Claude. The first half may…

    40 条评论
  • Mountain Minute: Kiss the Sky

    Mountain Minute: Kiss the Sky

    Yesterday I stood on this peak, shrouded in a cloud, and felt tremendous gratitude. To be 11,600 feet high somehow…

    19 条评论
  • Mountain Minute: Sick, Lost and Thankful

    Mountain Minute: Sick, Lost and Thankful

    I've been excited for months to go on this winter's seven-week ski trip around the US and Canada. This is week two…

    25 条评论
  • Huge Profits AND Huge Layoffs?

    Huge Profits AND Huge Layoffs?

    I have been busy deleting most of my Facebook posts. Here's why.

    23 条评论
  • Mountain Minute: A Few Words about Telepathy

    Mountain Minute: A Few Words about Telepathy

    The Telepathy Tapes podcast makes the case that "non-speakers with autism—individuals who have long been misunderstood…

    14 条评论
  • Exploring the Impact of Group Meditation on World Peace

    Exploring the Impact of Group Meditation on World Peace

    Nine months ago, I launched Meditate for Peace, after learning that there's evidence to suggest that when enough people…

    7 条评论

社区洞察

其他会员也浏览了