from Hacker News

Roc Camera

by martialg on 10/24/25, 2:54 AM with 439 comments

  • by peteforde on 10/24/25, 5:26 AM

    I used to be really (really really) into photography. I respect anyone working hard on a physical product, but this misses the mark on every front I can think of.

    The real issue that photographers grapple with, emotionally and financially, is that pictures have become so thoroughly commodified that nobody assigns them cultural value anymore. They are the thumbnail you see before the short video clip starts playing.

    Nobody has ever walked past a photograph because they can't inspect its digital authenticity hash. This is especially funny to me because I used to struggle with the fact that people looking at your work don't know or care what kind of camera or process was involved. They don't know if I spent two hours zoomed in removing microscopic dust particles from the scanning process after a long hike to get a single shot at 5:30am, or if it was just the 32nd of 122 shots taken in a burst by someone holding up an iPad Pro Max at a U2 concert.

    This all made me sad for a long time, but I ultimately came to terms with the fact that my own incentives were perverse; I was seeking the external gratification of getting likes just like everyone else. If you can get back to a place where you're taking photographs or making music or doing 5 minute daily synth drills for your own happiness with no expectation of external validity, you will be far happier taking that $399 and buying a Mamiya C330.

    This video is about music, but it's also about everything worth doing for the right reasons. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NvQF4YIvxwE

  • by jeswin on 10/24/25, 6:13 AM

    I am actually willing to support DIY camera efforts, but if you're semi-serious about taking pictures, this just wouldn't work. First, Raspberry Pi (I'm guessing this is a CM4/CM5) is a disaster for a camera board. Nobody wants a 20s boot every time you want to take a picture, cameras need to be near instantaneous. And you can't keep it on either, because the RPi can't really sleep. There are boards that can actually sleep, but with fewer sensor options.

    Now moving on to the sensor (IMX 519 - Arducam?) - it's tinier than the tiniest sensor found on phones. If you really want to have decent image quality, you should look at Will Whang's OneInchEye and Four-thirds eye (https://www.willwhang.dev/). 4/3 Eye uses IMX294 which is currently the only large sensor which has Linux support (I think he upstreamed it) and MIPI. All the other larger sensors use interfaces like SLVS which are impossible to connect to.

    If anyone's going to attempt a serious camera, they need to do two things. Use at least a 1 inch sensor, and a board which can actually sleep (which means it can't be the RPi). This would mean a bunch of difficult work, such as drivers to get these sensors to work with those boards. The Alice Camera (https://www.alice.camera/) is a better attempt and probably uses the IMX294 as well. The most impressive attempt however is Wenting Zhang's Sitina S1 - (https://rangefinderforum.com/threads/diy-full-frame-digital-...). He used a full frame Kodak CCD Sensor.

    There is a market for a well made camera like the Fuji X-Half. It doesn't need to have a lot of features, just needs to have ergonomics and take decent pictures. Stuff like proofs are secondary to what actually matters - first it needs to take good pictures, which the IMX 519 is going to struggle with.

  • by donaldihunter on 10/24/25, 8:55 AM

    I don't think ZK proofs help to establish trust in a photo's authenticity at all. C2PA is a well thought out solution to this problem.

    https://spec.c2pa.org/specifications/specifications/2.2/spec...

    > The C2PA information comprises a series of statements that cover areas such as asset creation, edit actions, capture device details, bindings to content and many other subjects. These statements, called assertions, make up the provenance of a given asset and represent a series of trust signals that can be used by a human to improve their view of trustworthiness concerning the asset. Assertions are wrapped up with additional information into a digitally signed entity called a claim.

  • by keyle on 10/24/25, 4:11 AM

    This is rather expensive for what looks like a home 3D printed toy with some cute software.

    Other than that it's a 16MP Sony CMOS, I'd expect a pretty noisy picture...

        How do I get my photos off the camera?
        
        Coming soon. We're working on export functionality to get your photos off the camera.
    
    It would be more interesting if the software was open source.
  • by r2b2 on 10/24/25, 8:14 PM

    This camera's attestation and zero-knowledge proof cannot verify that a photo is not AI generated. Worse, those "verifications" may trick people into believing photos are trustworthy or authentic that are not.

    Similar to ad-clicks or product reviews, if this were to catch on, Roc cameras (and Roc camera farms) will be used to take photos of inauthentic photos.

    Ultimately, the only useful authenticity test is human reputation.

    If someone (or an organization) wants to be trusted as authentic, the best they can do is stake their identity on the authenticity of things they do and share, over and over.

  • by modeless on 10/24/25, 4:28 AM

    Seems to me that a camera like this is necessarily, at least in part, a closed system that blocks you from controlling the software or hardware on the device you supposedly own. It's hard for me to think this is a good direction. And as others have pointed out, it can't prevent attacks through the analog hole, e.g. photographing a display.

    It's not feasible or desirable for our hardware devices to verify the information they record autonomously. A real solution to the problem of attribution in the age of AI must be based on reputation. People should be able to vouch for information in verifiable ways with consequences for being untrustworthy.

  • by nixpulvis on 10/24/25, 4:32 AM

    Am I just a crazy cynic or are ZK proofs here just a buzzword.

    Like, how is this any different than having each camera equipped with a vendor controlled key and then having it sign every photo?

    If you can spoof the sensor enough to reuse the key, couldn't you spoof the sensor enough to fool a verifier into believing your false proof?

  • by dusted on 10/24/25, 6:03 AM

    I don't understand how the "proof" part works, like, what part of the input to the "proof generation" algorithm is so inherently tied to the real world that one cannot feed it "fake" data ?
  • by dimas_codes on 10/24/25, 7:27 AM

    I am sorry if I missed something or someone already asked it, but:

    If I generate image with AI, print it, then take a photo of it with Roc Camera so that you can't tell that this is actually a printed image, I will then have an AI image with ZKP of its authenticity?

  • by cesaref on 10/24/25, 11:52 AM

    There's the C2PA standard which has picked up momentum recently to I guess help resolve some of the issues.

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/rd/blog/2024-03-c2pa-verification-news...

    I believe various cameras support this, e.g. https://www.canon-europe.com/press-centre/press-releases/202...

    `C2PA Authenticity: Integrated support for the C2PA standard for photo authenticity verification – initially available exclusively for registered news agencies.`

    Sounds like it's limited to some users for now, I guess this will change in the future.

    Going too far won't really help, since the scene being photographed can be manipulated or staged, which sounds more likely to be a concern rather than the hardware being hacked.

  • by maieuticagent on 10/24/25, 7:46 PM

    Consider pivoting from hardware sales to verification-as-a-service. Your camera could be the universal input device for identity verification (less creepy than Worldcoin's Orb), insurance claims, real estate documentation, and legal evidence. Think transaction fees per verification, not one-time camera sales. The consumer angle is weak - most people won't buy specialized hardware to prove their vacation photos are real. But enterprises would absolutely pay for a solution that reduces fraud, accelerates claims processing, or enables compliant remote verification. Dating apps would pay for "verified real person" badges. Banks would pay for remote account opening. Stop trying to create a problem and start solving the expensive problems that already exist:

    Identity verification for financial services, social platforms, and gig economy (KYC/AML compliance) Professional tools for insurance, real estate, law enforcement, and healthcare documentation Enterprise authentication-as-a-service model

  • by vlmutolo on 10/24/25, 4:07 AM

    I wonder how this compares to similar initiatives by e.g. Sony [0] and Leica [1].

    [0]: https://authenticity.sony.net/camera/en-us/

    [1]: https://petapixel.com/2023/10/26/leica-m11-p-review-as-authe...

  • by zalusio on 10/24/25, 7:43 PM

    Obviously, this has the vulnerability that you can take a picture of a computer monitor with it, showing whatever you want to.

    Apple could really make an interesting product here where they combine the LIDAR data with the camera data, cryptographically sign it, and attest to it as unmodified straight from the camera. Can it still be faked? Yes, but it's much harder to do.

  • by quailfarmer on 10/24/25, 6:40 AM

    Kudos for making this exist, it was an inevitable place for the conversation to lead, and I’m actually glad it was “hacked” together as a project rather than forced into a consumer product. The camera specs don’t really matter here, this is about having the conversation. If this catches on, it will be a feature of every smartphone SoC.

    On one hand, it’s a cool application of cryptography as a power tool to balance AI, but on the other, it’s a real hit to free and open systems. There’s a risk that concern over AI spirals into a justification for mandatory attestation that undermines digital freedom. See: online banking apps that refuse to operate on free devices.

  • by fitsumbelay on 10/24/25, 7:30 PM

    Lots of cool ideas here - crypto first/crypto everything, IPFS and soon Farcaster integration. But the price is a big negative.

    I also believe that whatever they're aiming at with verifiably real photos will either be commodified or end up not being valued very highly.

    It's not quite the Rabbit R1 (at least the presentation here seems more honest) but I don't see it generating more than niche-of-niche interest.

    Also, and maybe more to the previous point about commodification (or within-reach tech), this is the kind of project I can imagine hardware hacker/AI and crypto enthusiast doing on their own ( and I guess selling to friends and neighbors for $400 ... )

  • by matt_daemon on 10/24/25, 5:42 AM

    Why do websites like this always try to be too clever? Let me scroll!
  • by elif on 10/24/25, 8:14 PM

    Who's really going to check if I spoofed the camera sensor data, and why?

    Also does this mean I can't adjust colors or make any changes to my photos?

    I could see this being neat in the context of a digital detox photo competition or something, but I don't see any real place for this in Art world

  • by zitterbewegung on 10/24/25, 4:01 AM

    I’m not seeing what this is product is trying to solve? A zero knowledge proof to say it isn’t AI ? I think you could do this with a disposable camera or Polaroids and a photo scanner that makes the zero knowledge proofs .
  • by novoreorx on 10/24/25, 7:59 AM

    This kinda like a PoC for ZK Proof used in digital devices, however, I don't think a Raspberry Pi in a 3D printed case should be made a real product, it lacks actualy use cases. Honestly, I like this concept, but I think it should belong to a personal art exhibition or DIY competition…
  • by merelysounds on 10/24/25, 6:37 AM

    I’m a photographer in my spare time; looks like this product isn’t about what images are being produced, or about the shooting experience - and this discourages me.

    When the goal is having a proof that the photo hasn’t been edited or ai generated, using an analog camera and shooting on film seems more practical to me than using a device like this.

  • by jeffamcgee on 10/24/25, 4:13 AM

    If you take this to ILM's The Volume, you can prove that The Mandolorian is real.
  • by noyesno on 10/24/25, 4:54 AM

  • by m00x on 10/24/25, 5:58 AM

    The Pi4 is extremely overpowered for this application. This looks like a rushed product from an SF brainfart with no engineering behind it.
  • by ch_fr on 10/24/25, 2:21 PM

    > How are my photos stored?

    >> We store the photos generated by the Roc Camera on IPFS (by default). We'll have more information on this soon, so check back for more details in the future.

    > How do I get my photos off the camera?

    >> Coming soon. We're working on export functionality to get your photos off the camera.

    > Where is the ZKP generated?

    >> The zero-knowledge proofs are generated on-device using the Raspberry Pi 4.

    I am a bit puzzled as to why IPFS was used as the "primary" storage medium there, it's a Pi so wouldn't it be pretty easy to make it have a micro-sd port? Wouldn't it be able to work fully locally then?

    When I look at their socials, it seems like they primarily engage with a crypto-focused audience, all of this leads me to believe that IPFS and ZKP are the actual main appeal of this product... not that there's anything overtly wrong with this.

  • by vzaliva on 10/24/25, 4:45 PM

    This is the right direction - the only way to go about fake images and video is digital signatures. Phone camera should be able to do this as well. Then we can have signatures of software used for processing them (on top) cerityfing what changes have been done: e.g. contract correction filter applied, signed by Adobe Photoshop.
  • by ajdlinux on 10/24/25, 7:29 AM

    My initial reactions:

    - I hope they succeed and eventually deliver a solid version of this product - verifiable photography is going to become important, and it's good to see startups working on this - While I'm sure some artists will like the idea of verifiable photography, the applications that matter to me are any kind of photography that has the potential to end up in a news article or in court - Selling what is essentially a prototype is fine, it's extremely obvious that's what it is, they explicitly say it! Who cares if it's not very good as a camera? - The almost complete lack of information on their site about their security model or how their ZKPs work is not particularly encouraging - It follows that my faith that either the cryptography or the hardware anti-tamper measures in this beta device would stand up to even some decent amateurs, given a couple of weeks to have a crack at it, is not high. I'm almost tempted to buy one just to see how far I, a random kernel engineer who gets modestly decent scores at my local hacker con CTF, could get. But I may well be completely underestimating them! Hard to tell with the fairly scarce information - Why did they pick a name that's similar to a) AMD's GPU stack, and b) the law enforcement/natsec computer vision business, ROC (https://roc.ai)?

  • by grey-area on 10/24/25, 7:13 AM

    This looks interesting. I love the retro styling and transparent case. The proofs and selling it as some sort of fight-back against AI seems tenuous and as the user controls the hardware - going to be hard to keep that system hermetically sealed due to giving the user the keys on device. Also though almost nobody actually cares very much about attesting that their photos are somehow real and untouched by AI.

    There are larger problems when you consider this question. What is real and not in photography is a long and storied debate - any photograph is ultimately a curation of a small part of the real world - what is just out of frame could completely change the interpretation of the viewer if they saw it, regardless of whether the picture is unaltered after taking. The choice of framing, colours, subject etc etc can radically alter meaning. There is no getting away from this.

    So ultimately I don't think the biggest problem facing photography is attested reality. I actually think the democratisation of photography offers a better way out - we have so many views on each event now that it's actually harder to fake because there are usually hundreds of pictures of the same thing.

    PS for the site author, there is a typo in the sentence beginning - remove the an 'By combining sensors, an on-device zero-knowledge proofs'.

  • by edf13 on 10/24/25, 6:09 AM

    Can’t I just photo a printed AI generated pic? What use is the proof?
  • by tantalor on 10/24/25, 3:04 PM

    How to defeat this:

    Step 1: Create an AI image and display it.

    Step 2: Use this camera to take a picture of it.

    Now you have "attested" proof of "verifiably real" image.

  • by positus on 10/24/25, 4:27 AM

    It seems like one could just shoot film and make darkroom prints and accomplish the same thing?
  • by ares623 on 10/24/25, 4:50 AM

    I don’t know what this gives that a film camera with slide film loaded doesn’t.

    Both cameras still allow “staging” a scene and taking a shot of that. Both cameras will both say that the scene was shot in the physical world, but that’s it.

    I would argue that slide film is more “verifiable” in the ways that matter: easier to explain to laypeople how slide film works, and it’s them that you want to convince.

    If I was a film or camera manufacturer I would try and go for this angle in marketing.

  • by n1c on 10/24/25, 11:04 AM

    If you like the idea of a small "dumbish" camera but aren't fussed about all the ZK proof stuff these are quite fun: https://www.campsnapphoto.com/collections/camp-snap-screen-f... I have a few and letting my small kid have a blast while not getting "screen time" is great.

    Side effect is I get a small little window into what he "sees" and his lived experience. Going through some of the pics recently was quite beautiful.

  • by noduerme on 10/24/25, 5:42 AM

    It's wild that it's already come to this: The camera itself becomes more important as the instrument to provide zero-trust proof.

    This is a brilliant solution to one of the most critical emergent problems. I can see a world where no digital image can be trusted if it doesn't come with a hash.

    There is also something called "film" which might be a retro answer to this problem.

  • by perdomon on 10/24/25, 5:01 PM

    This is a cool idea, but why is it $400? This feels more like an open-source passion project than a legitimate business venture.
  • by alyxya on 10/24/25, 9:53 AM

    It’s a cool idea, but I don’t know how much people care about a photo provably being real. I take pictures with my phone because it’s simple and convenient. I get the vibe that it’s kinda like NFTs, where maybe some people would care if certain NFTs are unique and permanently on some blockchain, but most people don’t. Most people won’t understand the technical details behind the proof so at most they can only trust the claim that a picture is provably real.
  • by astrange on 10/24/25, 9:06 AM

    I think it'd be more interesting if you made a camera that took verifiably fake photos that were guaranteed to be nothing like what you pointed it at.
  • by captainmuon on 10/24/25, 9:41 AM

    Nooo... I don't want something to exist that can absolutely prove that a photo is real. This only serves to enforce social norms more rigidly. These include reasonable norms like against committing crimes or behaving abusingly but it also includes stupid norms like behaving uncool or doing something embarrasing. The problem is, where do you draw the line? I think if somebody does something stupid or even morally dubious there should always be a way of forgetting it.

    That you can't believe everything you see in the age of AI is a feature, not a bug. We are so used to photographs being hard facts that we'll have to go through a hard transition, but we'll be fine afterwards, just as we were before the invention of photography. Our norms will adapt. And photographs will become mere heresay and illustration, but that's OK.

    I think here the same dynamic is at play as with music/videos and DRM. Our society is so used to doing it the old way - selling physical records - that when new technology comes along, which allows free copying, we can't go where the technology leads us (because we don't know how to feed the artists, and because the record industry has too much power), so we invent a mechanism to turn back the wheel and make music into a scarce good again. Similar here: we can't ban Photoshop and AI, but we invent a technology to try to turn back time and make photos "evidence" again.

  • by ludicrousdispla on 10/24/25, 7:26 AM

    Does anyone know if the camera sensor includes depth map information? Otherwise what is stopping someone from photographing a large high-resolution print of an AI generated image.
  • by computersuck on 10/24/25, 8:59 AM

    What if they take a photo of an AI generated photo
  • by Bengalilol on 10/24/25, 7:13 AM

    The main argument of this product is to "capture verifiably real moments". Though I find it interesting (and am quite liking the object), I do not tend to think this is a strong argument for this product: capturing a picture of a unreal picture would make it real (as discussed in this thread), moreover what would prevent any phone manufacturer from integrating the same type of "validation" into their hardware?
  • by dsrtslnd23 on 10/24/25, 6:55 AM

    I remember reading in some Qualcomm Snapdragon document that Qualcomm integrated some image authenticity method. Not sure if this ever landed in an end-product?
  • by throawayonthe on 10/24/25, 9:40 AM

    i don't get how the attestation works? from the FAQ, the proofs are generated on the rpi, which AFAIK doesn't have anything like a modern HSM/vault which would allow them to 1. not allow user access to the secret or 2. not allow user to put ai-generated imagery onto the device for 'attestation'
  • by bdcravens on 10/24/25, 1:50 PM

    Are they releasing the STL to let people print their own shell? If not, seems odd to advertise the fact that it's 3d printed with standard (Bambu Lab) printers.
  • by sfjailbird on 10/24/25, 10:17 AM

    There was a time when web pages were like regular documents, that could easily be scrolled through.
  • by defraudbah on 10/24/25, 6:50 AM

    lol, faq is funny

    how long does the batter last

    > Currently, the battery will last estimated 2~3 hours on constant use on a full charge. It can last much longer if it is off.

  • by anigbrowl on 10/24/25, 7:31 AM

    I like the concept (because I was proposing such a couple of years back) and the software implementation seems good. But holy shit that thing is ugly. They could(should) have worked with a cheap camera maker like Lomokino to make a bare-bones rangefinder or twin lens reflex. This is one of the worst designs I have ever seen. Sorry.
  • by shocks on 10/24/25, 7:56 PM

    Just shoot film.
  • by padolsey on 10/24/25, 4:21 AM

    What concerns me most in the era of gen AI irt photography is journalism. We need truth, most especially when limited-means citizen journalism is the only reliable source of that truth.

    But I feel like the only way to accomplish fool-proof photos we can trust in a trustless way (i.e. without relying on e.g. the Press Association to vet) is to utterly PACK the hardware with sensors and tamper-proof attestation so the capture can’t be plausibly faked: multi-spectral (RGB + IR + UV) imaging, depth/LiDAR, stereo cameras, PRNU fingerprinting, IMU motion data, secure GPS with attested fix, a hardware clock and secure element for signing, ambient audio, lens telemetry, environmental sensors (temperature, barometer, humidity, light spectrum) — all wrapped in cryptographic proofs that bind these readings to the pixels.

    In the meantime however, I'd trust a 360deg go-pro with some kind of signature of manafacture. OR just a LOT of people taking photos in a given vicinity. Hard to fake that.

  • by bobertdowney on 10/24/25, 4:17 AM

    Could Apple or Google do this without updating their hardware? I see a relevant patent (US20220294640A1) and it looks like one of the inventors is at Google now.
  • by harddrivereque on 10/24/25, 1:06 PM

    But why does the case look like it is made out of garbage?
  • by skeptrune on 10/24/25, 7:31 AM

    I like the spirit of this, but not the implementation. It feels very performative to create a ZK proof to show that a photo is real. And not really in the spirit of capturing magic moments on film.

    I think that a disposable camera, or even something fancier, like a Mamiya C330, are better and more gratifying bets for the money.

  • by I_dream_of_Geni on 10/24/25, 5:28 PM

    This sounds cool. But why so freaking expensive??
  • by abricq on 10/24/25, 7:55 AM

    What I am waiting for is something similar to this (proof of image ownership / authenticity) embedded in smartphones cameras.

    Not sure if ZK is the right way of achieving this. Even if the cryptographic guarantees are strong, generating these proofs is very expensive.

  • by d_silin on 10/24/25, 4:34 AM

    You can absolutely sign the image with the on-camera certificate, for example, but that would too boring of a solution to hype.
  • by nextlevelwizard on 10/24/25, 6:35 AM

    Heh, few years ago I built myself a RPi Zero based camera.

    I wonder how have they made the boot up fast enough to not be annoying.

    I used non-real time eInk display to cut down on the battery life so I could just keep it on in my pocket while out taking pictures since it took good minute to get ready from cold boot.

  • by gherard5555 on 10/24/25, 8:48 AM

    400$ for a phone camera stuck on a raspberry pi ? I will pass this one...
  • by Rickasaurus on 10/24/25, 1:31 PM

    Seems like this could be a great product for law enforcement no? Verifiable pictures of evidence.
  • by BeFlatXIII on 10/24/25, 5:20 PM

    The custom scolling is janky on Safari.
  • by seasongs on 10/24/25, 9:59 AM

    Cool idea, could be implemented in future professional cameras but as of right now, I can’t think of a single reason that someone into photography would buy this
  • by boo-ga-ga on 10/24/25, 8:55 AM

    Fantastic idea, I'm sure there will be more such devices and a big market for them. Note to the company: please check the scrolling on Firefox (macOS), it's a little weird.
  • by flanbybleue69 on 10/24/25, 9:27 AM

    If you do photography for your own pleasure and not for the sake of likes, gratification or public opinion you can use whatever hardware or software it’s alright.
  • by kingnothing on 10/24/25, 3:08 PM

    This page cannot be scrolled in Safari or Firefox.

    Devs -- stop hijacking native scrolling functionality. Why? You had one shot to sell me on this product. I can't see the page, so I can't consider it for purchase. That's a lost sale.

  • by rukuu001 on 10/24/25, 4:37 AM

    Literally manufacturing trust eh?
  • by blauditore on 10/24/25, 6:19 AM

    It's not like questioning the authenticity of a photo is a new thing "in the age of AI". Manipulating photos has always been a thing, long before photoshop even.
  • by frouge on 10/24/25, 9:17 AM

    To me it sounds like someone is trying to create a problem and sell it to me. Who needs to create images with proof of reality?
  • by Tepix on 10/24/25, 7:39 AM

    Remember, Nikon's image authentication was hacked back in 2011 https://blog.elcomsoft.com/2011/04/nikon-image-authenticatio...

    The ACLU is sceptical regarding the whole concept: https://www.aclu-or.org/en/news/attempts-technological-solut...

    The root causes podcast discusses this topic in its episode 336: https://www.sectigo.com/resource-library/root-causes-336-dig...

    I strongly believe this should be an open source project.

  • by realharo on 10/24/25, 9:35 AM

    How does this compare to the content credentials added by the Pixel 10's camera?
  • by asimpleusecase on 10/24/25, 5:52 AM

    Kinda interesting- of course until it hacked. But honestly it does not look like something I would want to carry around.
  • by blitzar on 10/24/25, 7:50 AM

    Even a pivot to "its not Ai" has the same bandwagon feel as "pivoting to Ai".
  • by prmoustache on 10/24/25, 5:31 AM

    If you are taking the photo yourself, you know where they come from. While would you need signed pictures to prove that?
  • by cma on 10/24/25, 3:59 AM

    > Creates a Zero Knowledge (ZK) Proof of the camera sensor data and other metadatas

    How do you stop someone from taking a picture of an AI picture? It will still come from the sensor.

  • by amelius on 10/24/25, 11:12 AM

    > Capture verifiably real moments

    What if I make a photo of my screen?

  • by fallat on 10/24/25, 1:14 PM

    399 for a sensor and rpi. I'm out.
  • by dwardu on 10/24/25, 9:05 AM

    So once the company shuts down its servers we've got a lemon?
  • by simultsop on 10/24/25, 4:22 AM

    For a moment I thought a software solution will be shared at the end. Did not expect a camera marketing.
  • by esaym on 10/24/25, 7:44 AM

    I'm going to buy this just to take a picture of my Kodak mining rig...
  • by alberth on 10/24/25, 4:58 AM

    How does this differ from a kids digital camera that costs only 1/10th the cost.

    Not trolling. Genuinely don’t understand.

    https://www.amazon.com/Camera-Digital-Toddler-Christmas-Birt...

  • by silcoon on 10/24/25, 6:35 AM

    Looks like a weekend project, done with a third of the cost as a budget.
  • by ollybee on 10/24/25, 6:37 AM

    I always assumed high end CCTV cameras already did something like this?
  • by cawksuwcka on 10/24/25, 4:03 PM

    NFT camera! sick!
  • by IlikeKitties on 10/24/25, 5:25 AM

    How could this possibly validate that the camera sensor that's attached to it is actually a camera sensor and not just an FPGA sending raw data?
  • by ArcherGorgonite on 10/24/25, 6:45 AM

    It has to be a joke...
  • by d--b on 10/24/25, 4:14 AM

    This looks like a hipster toy.

    It’s possible that this could have value in journalism or law enforcement.

    Just make it look the part. Make it black and put some decent lens on it.

  • by rfl890 on 10/24/25, 1:05 PM

    First Roc Vodka, now this?
  • by pharos92 on 10/24/25, 8:27 AM

    $399 USD. L.O.L.
  • by jppope on 10/24/25, 4:06 AM

    I can't tell does this have adversarial AI built in?
  • by sbinnee on 10/24/25, 4:16 AM

    I have been happily using fujifilm x100 for about 10 years now? I bought a second hand one for about $300. You can buy a decent camera cheaper than a smartphone, as it should be.
  • by dschuetz on 10/24/25, 7:38 AM

    $400 lul what
  • by akersten on 10/24/25, 4:18 AM

    back in my day when we wanted to prove a picture was "real" (and not Photoshopped), we just posted the .NEF file
  • by anon191928 on 10/24/25, 10:24 AM

    this all assumes nobody will make editing ???? what am I missing
  • by didacusc on 10/24/25, 2:10 PM

    What a silly idea, a whole Raspberry Pi for basic photography! Just the boot-up alone would drive someone nuts, you'd miss the moment every time and I'd drain your battery if you left it on. So silly.
  • by dandanua on 10/24/25, 6:46 AM

    Any device like this is useless, because you can print an AI generated picture and then take a photo of it. It's like NFTs in the crypto world, which have proofs that prove essentially nothing.
  • by cultofmetatron on 10/24/25, 4:11 AM

    put this in a durable rangefinder form factor and it would be great as a journalism camera.
  • by yieldcrv on 10/24/25, 5:27 PM

    no moat

    this is one of those things you shouldn't buy aside from novelty, but this idea wouldnt reach the light of day now without doing it this way

    the real goal would be integration into more popular camera systems

    I hope the founders and this concept gets all the support they are looking for

  • by qwertytyyuu on 10/24/25, 7:46 AM

    Is this nfts again?
  • by micromacrofoot on 10/24/25, 12:45 PM

    I find that most people who want to ground things in reality, that is at least "reality" without AI or whatever filters are put on photos by phones these days, don't have much interest in any sort of cryptographic proof of reality... this is in the same realm of technology they're trying to avoid.
  • by feketegy on 10/24/25, 6:14 AM

    Is this another cash grab? The founders who made this don't seem to know what real photography is.
  • by globular-toast on 10/24/25, 10:58 AM

    Has anyone else found themselves becoming hyper-attuned to "AI" trickery in photographs?

    Just the other day I stumbled across this picture on Wikipedia: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:An_AT%26T_wireless_r... Can anyone explain what's going on with the front tyre of the white car? To me it looks like the actual picture was ingested by a model then spat back out again with a weird artifact.

    The worrying thing is when it becomes too hard to spot the artifacts we won't know how much of our history has been altered subtly, either unintentionally or not, by "AI".

  • by spaceman_2020 on 10/24/25, 8:42 AM

    I fail to see the hand wringing about media forms that didn’t exist 150 years ago.

    Even worse when I see people saying “it’s over” for slop content posted on social media

    We lived fine and well before social media or photography or videos.

  • by napolux on 10/24/25, 3:45 PM

    This is so "silicon valley", like the juicero thing.
  • by self_awareness on 10/24/25, 9:41 AM

    Interesting, but this is a software project. Camera sensor is being bought from Aliexpress in bulk. Competition from companies manufacturing cameras, or smartphones, is huge. How this project is not a cash grab?
  • by flyinglizard on 10/24/25, 7:30 AM

    Good thinking, but the problem here is that in order to make a good camera which takes verifiable photos you first need to make a good camera, and that's quite hard.
  • by russellbeattie on 10/24/25, 7:12 AM

    This shouldn't be a product, but a licensed patented technology like Dolby or CDMA, sold to OEMs and directly integrated into cameras and phones.

    It should be an industry standard system for guaranteeing authenticity by coordinating hardware and software to be as tamper proof as possible and saved in a cryptographically verifiable way.

    No system like this would be perfect, but that's the enemy of the good.

  • by troupo on 10/24/25, 5:22 AM

    So it's a Raspberry Pi attaching a ZK Proof to an image to say that this image was taken on this particular Raspberry Pi.

    That's it. That's the verification?

    So what happens when I use a Raspberry Pi to attach a ZK proof to an AI- generated image?

  • by wilg on 10/24/25, 4:41 AM

    There's simply no technical solution to authenticating photographs as far as I can tell.

    The only real solution I can think of is just to have multiple independent parties photograph the same event and use social trust. Luckily this solution is getting easier now that almost everyone is generally no further than 3 feet away from multiple cameras.

  • by monooso on 10/24/25, 7:34 AM

    There is something deeply dystopian about the phrase "verifiably real moments."
  • by byyoung3 on 10/24/25, 10:57 AM

    399 hahahahahahahahahahahahhahaqhahaha cool idea tho
  • by boobsbr on 10/24/25, 6:08 AM

    Stop hijacking the scrolling.
  • by colordrops on 10/24/25, 5:47 AM

    I predicted something similar a while back:

    https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=31092225

  • by 4gotunameagain on 10/24/25, 8:21 AM

    $400 for a raspberry pi in an ugly 3d printed case ?

    I love the idea, but the product execution is simply horrendous. It looks more like a money grab gimmick. The sensor selection is also bad, the image quality will be terrible.

  • by ninetyninenine on 10/24/25, 6:45 AM

    This has it all wrong.

    The truth is worse than anyone wants to face. It was never about authenticity or creativity. Those words are just bullshit armor for fragile egos. Proofs and certificates do not mean a damn thing.

    AI tore the mask off. It showed that everything we worship, art, music, poetry, beauty, all of it runs on patterns. Patterns so simple and predictable that a lifeless algorithm can spit them out while we sit here calling ourselves special. The magic we swore was human turns out to be math wearing makeup.

    Strip away the label and no one can tell who made it. The human touch we brag about dissolves into noise. The line between creator and creation never existed. We were just too arrogant to admit it.

    Love, happiness, beauty, meaning, all of it is chemistry and physics. Neurons firing, hormones leaking, atoms slamming into each other. That is what we are when we fall in love, when we cry, when we write a song we think no machine could ever match. It is all the same damn pattern. Give a machine enough data and it will mimic our souls so well we will start to feel stupid for ever thinking we had one.

    This is not the future. It is already moving beneath us. The trendline is clear. AI will make films that crush Hollywood. Maybe not today, maybe not next year, but that is where the graph is pointing. And artists who refuse to use it, who cling to the old ways out of pride or fear, are just holding on to stupidity. The tools have changed. Pretending they have not is the fastest way to become irrelevant.

    Yes, maybe right now you can still tell the difference. Maybe it is obvious. But look at the rate. Look at the slope of that goddamn line. The speed of progress is unmistakable. Every year the gap closes. Every year the boundary between man and machine blurs a little more. Anyone who cannot see where this is going, anyone who cannot admit that this is a realistic possibility, is in total denial. The projection of that line into the future cannot be ignored. It is not speculation anymore. It is math, and it is happening right in front of us.

    People will still scoff, call it soulless, call it fake. But put them in a blind test and they will swear it was human. The applause will sound exactly the same.

    And one day a masterpiece will explode across the world. Everyone will lose their minds over it. Critics will write essays about its beauty and depth. People will cry, saying it touched something pure in them. Then the creator will step forward and say it was AI. And the whole fucking world will go quiet.

    Because in that silence we will understand. There was never anything special about us. No divine spark. No secret soul. Just patterns pretending to mean something.

    We are noise that learned to imitate order. Equations wrapped in skin. Puppets jerking to the pull of chemistry, pretending it is choice.