Sometimes, it just needed the right amount of unknown.… Aya first saw the photo at 06:12. A grainy satellite image. A burned-out convoy. A caption: “Unconfirmed attack near coastal evacuation zone.” It spread fast — faster than official channels, faster than journalists, faster than truth ever moved. By 06:20, panic buying had started in three cities. Aya worked in what the public called “verification.” Inside the building, they called it lag management — managing the time gap between reality and belief. She zoomed into the image. Artifacts. Compression ghosts. Lighting mismatch. Not proof of fabrication. But not proof of reality either. And that was enough. Recent crises had shown how powerful that gray zone was. After a 2025 attack in Australia, deepfake victim images and false narratives spread online to millions before authorities could respond. During the 2025 India–Pakistan conflict, AI-generated vid...