Right-click any audio. Get a verdict.
Install once. Works on WhatsApp Web, YouTube, podcasts, any HTML5 audio. Verdicts open in a side panel. Citations are one click.
From any tab to a verdict.
Pinned to your toolbar. No background tracking. The extension only listens when you ask it to.
Add it to Chrome.
One click from the Chrome Web Store. We do not request your browsing history or your tabs.
Any HTML5 audio.
Right-click an audio element in any tab and choose "Analyze with AI Voice Detector". The side panel opens.
One-click citation.
Every verdict has a permanent URL and APA-style citation, copyable from the panel.
What we ask for. And why.
Every permission listed here. We refuse to ask for anything not on this list.
Common questions.
Short answers. Email the team for anything not here.
Does it work on Firefox, Safari, or Arc?
Does it work on mobile?
What audio does it skip?
Is it free?
The extension only listens when you ask it to. No background pages, no browsing history, no telemetry. You right-click one audio element, we read that element, and nothing else.
Every permission is listed on this page with the reason we need it. If it is not on that list, we do not ask for it.
Where the extension helps most
The extension exists for the audio you cannot easily download. Right-click a WhatsApp Web voice note, a clip embedded in a YouTube video, a podcast player, or any HTML5 audio on the page, and you get a verdict in a side panel without leaving the tab. It runs the same model as the public detector, returns the same probability, confidence, and named model, and produces the same permanent citation you can quote or file.
It only does anything when you ask it to. There is no background listening and no capture until you right-click a specific piece of audio, and the clip you check follows the same handling as everywhere else on the service: deleted within twenty-four hours unless you save the verdict, never used to train the model unless you opt in. I reach for it most when a suspicious message arrives mid-conversation and I want an answer before I reply, rather than downloading a file and switching tools. For a suspected scam call recording, pair it with the steps in our vishing guide. In practice it is the fastest path I have from "that sounded off" to a verdict I can actually point to, without breaking the flow of whatever I was already doing.