Decision Support · Side-by-side
Compare pricing, strengths, and use cases so it is easier to pick the right fit.
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Seventh Sense
Best overallNeither Incode Deepsight nor Seventh Sense is built for everyday users—both are enterprise security tools. Incode Deepsight wins for large organizations needing real-time deepfake detection and passive liveness, while Seventh Sense is more accessible for developers wanting privacy-preserving face recognition. The single biggest difference: Incode is a full fraud-prevention platform; Seventh Sense is a leaner API for biometric verification.
Incode Deepsight
Seventh Sense
Scores at a glance
Choose Incode Deepsight if
Choose Seventh Sense if
Key differences
Facts side by side
| Incode Deepsight | Seventh Sense | |
|---|---|---|
| Free plan | ||
| Mobile app | ||
| API access |
Common questions
No. Neither tool has a consumer mobile app. Incode provides an SDK that developers can embed into a mobile app, and Seventh Sense is a backend API. You can't download either from an app store.
Neither is ideal. Incode is too expensive and complex for small businesses. Seventh Sense is more accessible for a developer to integrate, but still requires technical setup. For a small business, look at simpler services like Onfido or Jumio.
Probably, but neither publishes pricing. Seventh Sense offers a developer portal with a free tier for testing, while Incode requires contacting sales—suggesting a higher price point. For a regular person, both are likely too expensive.
Only Incode Deepsight explicitly offers deepfake detection as a primary task. Seventh Sense focuses on face recognition and liveness detection, but does not advertise deepfake detection as a core feature.
Yes, for both. Incode requires integrating an SDK and configuring webhooks. Seventh Sense requires installing SDKs and calling API endpoints. Neither is a plug-and-play product for non-technical users.
Both Incode Deepsight and Seventh Sense are enterprise security tools for developers, not everyday users—skip them unless you're building a fraud-prevention system or a custom face-recognition app.
If you're a regular person looking for an AI tool to use on your phone or for daily tasks, neither Incode Deepsight nor Seventh Sense is for you—they're both developer tools for enterprise security. For most everyday users, skip these and look at consumer-friendly identity verification apps like Google's Face Match or Apple's Face ID. If you're a developer, Seventh Sense is the more practical starting point due to its developer portal and privacy focus.
Detail pages: Incode Deepsight · Seventh Sense