Artificial intelligence is changing the world around us. It’s transforming how we work, how we use the Internet, how we entertain ourselves, and how we interact with each other.
Like most new technologies, AI has enormous potential for both good and harm. Because while AI is bringing us new ways to live, it’s also bringing criminals new ways to run scams.
From phishing to DDoS attacks to Facebook Marketplace scams, AI is putting powerful tools in the hands of scammers. Let’s take a look at how you can protect yourself.
AI has become a powerful tool for scammers. Its ability to collect, analyse, and interpret huge quantities of data makes it a scammer’s best friend.
Generative AI, in particular, makes scams even easier to do. For instance, it’s now possible for anyone with an Internet connection to generate extremely realistic photos and videos of fake people. Generative AI can also write messages and emails in any tone of voice or language. That makes it easier for scammers to trick their targets into trusting them. Many of these tools are free and simple to use.
Then there are deepfakes—AI-generated impersonations of real people that can trick others into being scammed. For example, scammers used AI to clone the voice of an energy company CEO and convinced colleagues to transfer €220,000. Likewise, a man lost $690,000 in weeks after falling for a fake video of Elon Musk offering cryptocurrency investments.
We all like to think we’d know a scam if we saw one. But AI allows scammers to create far more convincing lies to trick us out of money. Here are some of the most common financial scams that use AI to trick people:
Scams have been around since long before the Internet. But AI has made them harder than ever to detect.
AI allows people to create messages free of spelling errors and other red flags traditional scams often had. AI can adapt in real time based on victim responses, so that its messages will reflect what you sent it. Its ability to generate fake images and videos makes the lies scammers tell their victims even more convincing.
And because AI can generate content quickly, it allows scammers to approach even more targets.
AI makes it harder than ever to spot a scam while it’s happening. But there are still ways that you can stay alert and protect yourself:
AI has given criminals new powers to trick people out of their money and data. But it also provides new tools to enhance cybersecurity. Still, the best defense against AI-powered scams remains your own judgment.
If something is too good to be true, it usually is. If someone is offering you a product or service much cheaper than anyone else, ask yourself why. If someone has a new profile with very little activity, assume they are not who they claim to be.
Be wary of anyone asking you for money or credentials. Remember, in the age of AI, people are not always what they seem. Use a reliable VPN and technology like multifactor authentication so that you won’t fall prey to an AI scam.
The post AI in Financial Crime: New Scams and How to Protect Yourself appeared first on FF News | Fintech Finance.

