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It’s Happening…AI Kidnapping Faked For Ransom Money
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It’s Happening…AI Kidnapping Faked For Ransom Money

January 19, 2024

Many of us wonder about the advent of artificial intelligence (AI) and how it will be used for wrongdoing. Well, wonder no more. The unthinkable happened when an Arizona mother received a phone call from her 15-year-old daughter saying she was kidnapped and being held for $1 million ransom. What unfolded exposed a cruel scam using AI to clone her daughter’s voice. It’s not the first time that criminals exploited AI for their benefit, and it surely won’t be the last.

Just a Few Seconds: AI Voice-Cloning Schemes

The phone number was unfamiliar, but the mother answered it only to hear her daughter pleading for her help. She never doubted it was her daughter’s voice, a chilling goal of the bogus kidnapping. Eventually, she was able to confirm her daughter was safe where she was supposed to be – away on a skiing trip.

AI specialist and Arizona State University computer science professor, Jim Stickley of Stickley on Security, lends his expertise to help explain the rise in AI voice-cloning. He says it takes only a few seconds of a person’s voice to clone it, including creating voice inflections and emotions, making it sound 100% authentic.

Social media, the FBI has long warned us, is where criminals find targets for fraudulent crimes. The Arizona mother says her daughter’s voice isn’t on social media but can be found in public interviews having to do with her school activities.

Tools to Prevent and Detect

FBI special agent, Dan Mayo, offers some sound advice to help prevent and detect AI voice-cloning fraud. He says public profiles are “allowing yourself to be scammed by people like this…and when they get ahold of that, they’re going to dig into you.”

That’s sound advice for those posting too much information (TMI) on their social media accounts. That TMI includes photos showing personally identifiable information like a car license plate or a boarding pass for that upcoming vacation.

Stickley also advises asking questions about the alleged kidnap victim that only someone who knows them has the answers to – and the scammer doesn’t. You can also create “code words” so that only you know and can be exchanged when there is doubt. Calls from unknown phone numbers and area codes, including international numbers, are reasons for suspicion.

For all the groundbreaking good AI has to offer the world, like most things, there are those who abuse it for personal gain. As for AI’s roll with cybersecurity, buckle up for a wild ride and stay informed to stay safe.


When Sharing Isn't Always A Good Thing: TikTok Shares Your PII

Mobile Security

When Sharing Isn't Always A Good Thing: TikTok Shares Your PII

Growing up, our elders taught us to share with others. Of course, we know they weren’t talking about sharing personal information online. If anything, the latest TikTok hack should be a lesson to us all to be extremely careful about the PII (personally identifiable information) we share online, especially on social media sites. TikTok’s “Find Friends” option was exploited by hackers who used it to steal PII from the account holder and their contacts. READ FULL STORY

Don’t Get Grinched! Holiday Scams And How To Avoid Them

Scams & Phishing

Don’t Get Grinched! Holiday Scams And How To Avoid Them

There’s an army of grinches out in full force this holiday season, so you’d better watch out or you just might need a good cry. It’s well known the holiday season brings scammers out of the woodwork. And now with artificial intelligence (AI) seeping into the fabric of scams, it may be more difficult than ever to separate the legit from the not. Before you dive head-first into the holiday season, take a look at some of the scams hoping to catch us off guard. READ FULL STORY

Facebook, Instagram Shopping Scams Run Wild And Rake In Millions

Scams & Phishing

Facebook, Instagram Shopping Scams Run Wild And Rake In Millions

Data recently released by the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) shows that the number of complaints about social media shopping scams more than tripled over the last year. Consumers reported losing more than $117 million to this type of scam in just the first six months of 2020 compared to $134 million for all of 2019, according to the FTC’s latest Consumer Protection Data Spotlight. The social media sites overwhelmingly involved in these scams are Facebook and Instagram, with consumer scam reports totaling 94% of all rip-offs involving a specific platform. READ FULL STORY

Top Phishing Scams Continue To Improve And Grow

Education

Top Phishing Scams Continue To Improve And Grow

Much to our dismay, cybercrooks keep finding ways to better the phishing tools they have and find other ways to include new and sneakier methods of thievery. Organizations and individuals are targets and money, identities, credentials, and more are stolen from both every day. Even cyber-savvy users can get caught in phishing scams if they don’t pay close attention to the signs and signals that something isn’t quite right. Reviewing the most pervasive phishing scams is always recommended. READ FULL STORY

AI ChatGPT And PaaS Merge, Further Weaponizing Email Phishing Campaigns

Your Security

AI ChatGPT And PaaS Merge, Further Weaponizing Email Phishing Campaigns

Hold on to your login credentials! A recent look at email phishing campaigns uncovered a 61% spike in attacks over the second half of last year. However, security pros find AI (artificial intelligence) is now accelerating these campaigns, and the number of attacks will significantly increase going forward. With the release of the AI ChatGPT platform coupled with PaaS (phishing-as-a-service) kit upgrades, email phishing is slated to be more pervasive and destructive than ever before. READ FULL STORY








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