Aerospace & Defense
IA Panopticon
Generative AI systems for narrative analysis, with a focus on determining the authenticity of information, identifying correlations to trace the sources of valid information, and social simulation for political analysis and simulated scenarios.
What is Panopticon AI?
In information-saturated environments, distinguishing fact from fiction is a strategic capability. AI Panopticon is a generative artificial intelligence system that analyzes narrative flows at scale, identifies patterns of coordinated disinformation, and traces the origin of valid information through cross-correlations across multiple sources and channels by simulating social behaviors and multiple scenarios.
The problem
Information warfare and fabricated narratives
Simulations are only as robust as the information that feeds them. When data comes from unverified sources or disinformation campaigns, agents learn, react, and evolve based on flawed assumptions. The result is scenarios that appear plausible but lack analytical validity.
The solution
Traceability of origin and source authentication
The platform incorporates mechanisms for traceability, provenance verification, and reliability assessment to distinguish authentic information from misleading content. This enables the design of more robust multi-agent simulations, in which agents operate based on signals that are better validated and more representative of real-world dynamics.
What We Develop
- Large-scale narrative analysis
- We process large volumes of content to identify emerging narratives, amplification patterns, and shifts in public discourse. This helps us understand how narratives are constructed, spread, and transformed across different digital environments, providing more robust inputs for strategic analysis and multi-agent simulation.
- Accuracy of information
- We assess the reliability of content based on its source, consistency, and publication context. The platform helps distinguish verifiable information from manipulated, misleading, or synthetic content, thereby improving the quality of the data used to model complex scenarios and make decisions with greater confidence.
- Tracking correlations and identifying sources
- We reconstruct relationships between content, actors, channels, and sources to map how information circulates and where it originates. This traceability allows us to identify hidden connections, validate dissemination chains, and understand which signals are relevant for building more realistic and verifiable scenarios.
- Data Mining for Disinformation
- We identify coordinated behaviors, repetitive patterns, and signs of narrative manipulation associated with disinformation campaigns. By detecting these phenomena early on in sources used for altered simulation, the platform reduces information noise and improves the validity of simulation environments where agents must respond to real-world information dynamics.
Areas of application
- Our social simulation platform is used in contexts where the quality of information is critical for anticipating risks, understanding narrative dynamics, and responding with greater precision. By combining narrative analysis, source authentication, traceability of origin, and disinformation detection, it enables us to navigate complex scenarios using more reliable and useful signals for decision-making and for social and strategic multi-agent simulation.
- Strategic Intelligence and National Defense
- Government and Institutional Communications
- Information and counter-narrative operations
- The Media and Institutional Fact-Checking
- Electoral security and the integrity of electoral processes
- Companies exposed to reputational risk
Why implement it now?
01/
Disinformation spreads at the speed of AI
The production and propagation of false false, manipulated or synthetic already happens on scale and in real real time. Without capabilities for verification, traceability and automated automated, the organizations are vulnerable to narratives that evolve more quickly than their own mechanisms of response.
02/
Nation-state actors are investing in cognitive science
Commercial and strategic competition is no longer limited to the military or economic spheres; it is also played out in the realms of perception, trust, and narrative. In the face of increasingly sophisticated information operations, having tools to detect influence, coordinate responses, and verify sources has become a strategic necessity.
03/
Critical decisions and verified information
In highly uncertain environments, a decision based on biased information can amplify operational, reputational, or institutional risks. Verifying the source and distinguishing between authentic signals and fabricated narratives is key to making more accurate decisions and conducting more precise simulations.
04/
Information sovereignty as a strategic advantage
The ability to understand, simulate, and manage one’s own information environment has become a strategic asset. Organizations that develop this capability not only reduce their vulnerability to competitors but also strengthen their autonomy and preparedness for complex scenarios.