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Wagh Bakri launches TVC created by Triton Communications

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MUMBAI: Wagh Bakri tea has launched a new television commercial conceptualised by Triton Communications.

The campaign- “Perfect Nati Jodi” targets maharashtrian men and women (in Maharashtra) aged 25-50 years.

With so many tea brands in the market and various rational benefits being offered by them, Wagh Bakri chose to use the emotional route to create a bond with Maharashtra, the company said.
 
Triton Communications MD Ali Merchant said, “We wanted to build on the current equity of the brand. Wagh Bakri, with its platform of ‘building relationships‘, has always chosen an emotional route to create a powerful bond with its audience.”

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“The challenge was to stay within the purview of the overarching brand thought of ‘Rishta‘. Thus helping create a preference for Wagh Bakri amongst existing and prospective consumers in Maharashtra, as well as giving a flavour of it being their very own tea brand,” Triton Communications national strategy officer and CD Renton D‘Sousa said.

D‘Sousa added, “Maharashtra is a land of many festivals and rich cultural flavours to which people are highly emotionally attached. We decided to use the festivals as the brand connect and as an expression of the brands respect and love for the culture of the land and its desire to make a Rishta with the locals”. 
 
Wagh Bakri Tea executive director Parag Desai added, “We created a special commercial for the Marathi audience thus showing our commitment to connect with them. This has been captured in the baseline of – ‘Waghbakri, Perfect naati jode‘. It will connect with Maharashtrian audience across SECs and age groups. It shows that Wagh Bakri is not just a great tasting refreshing tea; it is part of every celebration in Maharashtra. Wagh Bakri tea is planning to promote the new campaign through various television commercials and on-ground activities for the next three months.”

The film uses different festivals of Maharashtra and essence of tea consumption on those special occasions to refresh, rejuvenate and build relationships. This 40 sec film has stories weaved in each of the festivals shown and through this bring in a relevant connect with all kinds of Maharashtrian audiences. The festivals captured are Govinda, Ganapati pooja, Ganapati visarjan and Mangala gaur. The films have been shot in a manner that each festival becomes an edit on its own too and can be run during that particular festival and hence giving maximum leverage for the brand.

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MAM

Deepfakes target women in 93 per cent of cases, report finds

Pi-labs study shows 900 per cent rise in female-focused synthetic media; India sees 60 per cent jump in cybercrime complaints.

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MUMBAI: Deepfakes aren’t just fooling cameras, they’re hitting women hardest, turning pixels into a new kind of weapon. A new report from creator intelligence platform Pi-labs has revealed that nearly 93 per cent of deepfake victims are women, with deepfake content targeting females surging 900% in recent years. The findings paint synthetic media as a fast-escalating digital threat with a stark gendered impact.

In India, cybercrime complaints involving women rose from about 50,000 in 2024 to nearly 80,000 by 2026, an increase of roughly 60 per cent in just two years. Almost 98 per cent of deepfake pornography is aimed at women, often powered by face-swapping apps and bot networks that disproportionately target females, including school-age girls. Victims typically fall in the 18–30 age group, with Bengaluru reporting a growing share of cases.

Globally, 62 per cent of deepfake abuse cases involving women go unreported due to stigma, in India, over one-third of women facing online harassment take no action, and many reduce their digital presence after abuse. Close to 33 per cent of women remain unaware of protective laws.

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City-level trends show Bengaluru leading with nearly 30 per cent of complaints, followed by Hyderabad (14 per cent), Mumbai (13 per cent), Chennai and Kolkata (5 per cent each), and Delhi (3 per cent).

Pi-labs, CEO and founder Anukush Tiwari said, “AI is one of the most powerful technologies of our time, but like every powerful tool, it reflects the intent of those who use it. We are witnessing a growing trust deficit in digital spaces, where identity can be manipulated within minutes and reputations can be damaged overnight.”

Image morphing and deepfake videos remain the most common forms of misuse. The report also notes a new trend: fully AI-generated female personas (not based on real individuals) gaining high engagement on social platforms, raising questions about digital credibility.

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Detection remains challenging due to widespread generative tools and rogue creators. Industry estimates suggest over 5,000 face-swap tools and more than 1,000 voice-cloning applications are accessible online.

pi-labs offers pi-authentify, an AI-driven detection system that scans media for generative markers and provides authenticity scores, as well as Namokavach, a verification portal delivering confidential assessments within two working days. The Payal gaming case was resolved using pi-authentify’s forensic analysis.

The report urges minimising digital footprints and adopting detection tools to limit replication risks. It frames the gendered impact of synthetic media as an urgent digital safety issue requiring coordinated action from individuals, platforms and technology providers.

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In a world where faces can be borrowed in seconds, the real crime isn’t just creation, it’s the silence that follows, and women are paying the heaviest price.

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