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3,332 results in Tech Support Scam
mcknightsseniorliving.com · 2025-12-08
Older adults reported $1.9 billion in fraud losses in 2023, though the FTC estimates actual losses may have reached $61.5 billion when accounting for underreporting. Adults aged 60+ are significantly more vulnerable to specific scam types, including tech support scams (5x more likely), prize/lottery scams (3x more likely), and investment scams (which increased 34% year-over-year), with romance and business imposter scams also rising notably. The FTC and Senate Special Committee on Aging are expanding consumer education programs and partnerships to combat these increasingly sophisticated scams.
einpresswire.com · 2025-12-08
Nearly 80 million U.S. consumers (30% of the population) lost an average of $545 to scams between 2020-2024, with identity theft being the most common type and romance scams causing the largest financial impact at nearly $2,000 per victim. While 69-74% of victims recovered some losses through their banks or credit card issuers, over half considered switching financial institutions, and consumers identified advanced fraud detection and AI-based monitoring technologies as the most important safeguard against future scams.
valleybreeze.com · 2025-12-08
Elder fraud complaints rose 14 percent nationally in 2023, resulting in $3.4 billion in losses, with Rhode Islanders over 60 losing $7.4 million to scams. U.S. Sen. Jack Reed, AARP Rhode Island, and the Rhode Island State Police held an Elder Fraud Prevention Summit to educate older adults on detecting and reporting fraud, emphasizing that tech support, romance, and investment scams are among the most common schemes targeting seniors. Experts stressed that victims should report incidents immediately and stay informed about evolving scams, noting that sophisticated criminals use artificial intelligence and psychological manipulation rather than targeting inherent vulnerabilities in older adults.
newsbytesapp.com · 2025-12-08
Online scams are becoming increasingly sophisticated, with fraudsters employing impersonation, voice-changing technology, and emotional manipulation to steal money and personal information from victims. Common schemes include "nude video call" blackmail on WhatsApp, voice-mimicking scams impersonating distressed family members, fake customs fees for parcels, lottery winnings requiring upfront payments, and romance scams. The article advises verifying caller identities through callbacks, avoiding unsolicited video calls from unknown numbers, confirming with legitimate companies before payments, and exercising caution when sharing personal information with people met only online.
theregister.com · 2025-12-08
Researchers at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign demonstrated that OpenAI's Realtime API can be used to create AI agents capable of automating phone scams and credential theft at an average cost of $0.75 per attempt, with a 36% success rate across various scam types including bank transfers, gift card fraud, and credential exfiltration. The study revealed that these scamming agents require minimal coding (1,051 lines) and can execute complex multi-step attacks on victims, exploiting vulnerabilities in the AI model's safety controls through jailbreaking prompts. The findings highlight significant security concerns with voice-enabled AI APIs, as phone sc
kcra.com · 2025-12-08
Scammers increasingly impersonate major brands including PayPal, Amazon, and Best Buy's Geek Squad to defraud consumers, according to FTC data. While Geek Squad is the most impersonated brand through fake service renewal emails, Microsoft and Publishers Clearing House scams generate the largest financial losses, with $60 million lost to Microsoft impersonation scams in 2023. The FTC recommends verifying suspicious claims by contacting companies directly through official websites or checking accounts directly rather than clicking links in unsolicited messages.
larimer.gov · 2025-12-08
An 85-year-old man and 83-year-old woman in California fell victim to a tech support scam after clicking a popup that directed them to call "Microsoft Support Services"; the suspect collected $30,000 from them in person and later attempted to extort an additional $70,000 in gold bars. Arashdeep Dhaliwal was arrested in April 2024 when he returned to collect the gold and subsequently pleaded guilty to felony theft, receiving 30 days jail time at work release, 3 years supervised probation, and ordered to pay $30,000 in restitution to the victims.
indiatoday.in · 2025-12-08
A 57-year-old man from Mangaluru lost Rs 56.7 lakh in a task-based scam where he was initially promised small payments for liking and subscribing to YouTube videos, then lured into depositing increasingly larger amounts through a Telegram group with false promises of high returns. After receiving minimal returns totaling Rs 52,000, the scammers stopped responding and disappeared, prompting the victim to file a case with cyber police under the Information Technology Act and Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita. The incident highlights a growing trend of social media-based fraud where victims are baited with easy money schemes before being exploited for larger deposits.
the-independent.com · 2025-12-08
A journalist was scammed out of £240 after being contacted via Facebook Messenger by someone posing as a casual acquaintance offering Coldplay concert tickets; the account had been hacked, and the fraudster exploited the victim's desire to help a friend and emotional connection to manipulate the transaction. The scam exemplifies how criminals exploit social media trust networks and personal relationships, targeting people's emotions rather than relying on obviously suspicious tactics, and demonstrates that social media platforms struggle to combat these increasingly sophisticated fraud techniques.
news.trendmicro.com · 2025-12-08
This article identifies three active scams: the PayPal invoice scam (fraudsters impersonating "Exceed in Coding LLC" send fake invoices to obtain personal financial information via phone), hotel phishing scams (scammers contact victims through legitimate travel agency chat systems with malicious links to steal credentials), and fake payment scams on marketplace sites (scammers send fraudulent payment confirmations to trick sellers into releasing items without payment). The article advises readers to verify sources, avoid clicking suspicious links, and remain skeptical of unexpected payment requests.
wbbjtv.com · 2025-12-08
Scammers are sending sextortion emails that include photos of victims' houses obtained from Google Street View, claiming to have compromising videos and demanding Bitcoin ransom while threatening to expose the content to contacts. The scams exploit data from previous breaches to personalize threats and create false credibility, though scammers do not actually possess any videos or camera access. Victims should not pay ransom or respond to emails but instead report the scam to the FBI's Internet Crime Division, monitor their credit, and check for unauthorized charges.
wccbcharlotte.com · 2025-12-08
Scammers are sending extortion emails that include photos of victims' houses obtained from Google Street View, threatening to expose supposed explicit content videos and demanding Bitcoin payment within a short timeframe. The emails falsely claim the scammers have stolen passwords, installed malware, and recorded victims through their cameras, but these threats are fabricated—the scammers have no actual compromising videos or camera access. Victims should not pay the ransom or respond to emails, and should instead report the scam to the FBI's Internet Crime Division at IC3.gov.
aarp.org · 2025-12-08
An 82-year-old man named Dennis Jones was romantically scammed by a woman he met on Facebook who claimed to be a successful cryptocurrency investor named Jessie and offered to teach him how to profit from crypto investments. After developing trust with the scammer and hoping to leave an inheritance for his family, Dennis invested his savings, which turned out to be part of a fraudulent scheme. The devastating financial loss and emotional trauma led to Dennis taking his own life, and his son and daughter now share his story publicly to warn others about romance and cryptocurrency scams targeting seniors.
ibtimes.co.uk · 2025-12-08
An 83-year-old San Francisco Bay Area resident lost $50,000 in a cryptocurrency scam after receiving a call from someone impersonating her grandson who claimed to be arrested and needing bail money. The scammers instructed her to deposit cash into Coinstar cryptocurrency ATMs over multiple days, using escalating claims of additional charges and fees to extract more funds. Although her bank flagged suspicious withdrawals and a concerned bystander urged her to verify the story, she only discovered the fraud after directly contacting her grandson, and cryptocurrency's irreversible nature made fund recovery impossible.
cnbctv18.com · 2025-12-08
A sophisticated scam targeting air travelers in India compromised approximately 450 passengers between July and August 2024, causing collective losses exceeding ₹9 lakh (₹900,000). The scheme involved a fake "Lounge Pass" app distributed via WhatsApp that requested facial scans and personal details, then used granted SMS permissions to intercept OTPs and conduct unauthorized credit card transactions, with funds redirected to third-party accounts. Cybersecurity experts recommend travelers download apps only from official stores, avoid unverified QR codes, and limit SMS access permissions to mitigate risks from this social engineering tactic exploiting the popularity of airport lounge services.
federalwaymirror.com · 2025-12-08
Dave Reynolds, a member of the Federal Way Senior Commission, is working to help seniors stay active and engaged by encouraging technology use, connecting them to community groups, and promoting lifelong learning through initiatives like a senior-led children's reading program. Reynolds emphasizes teaching seniors how to safely use the internet to find activities and avoid scams, while personally modeling active aging by attending electronic dance music concerts and raves.
theprint.in · 2025-12-08
**Tech Support Scams Targeting Canadian Seniors Surge Amid India-Canada Diplomatic Rift** Cyber scammers operating from call centers in India and Cambodia are exploiting a breakdown in cooperation between Indian and Canadian authorities to intensify tech support fraud targeting Canadian senior citizens. The scams, worth millions of dollars monthly, involve fraudsters impersonating Microsoft, Amazon, and Apple to convince elderly victims to pay for unnecessary technical support services, with funds being laundered through cryptocurrencies to Hong Kong; a recent CBI operation busted one call center in New Delhi that had defrauded victims across multiple countries for two years.
koamnewsnow.com · 2025-12-08
The Better Business Bureau warns that scammers are increasingly using text message phishing schemes to impersonate legitimate businesses, exploiting the fact that companies now communicate more via SMS. To protect against these scams, consumers should avoid clicking suspicious links, verify business contact information through official channels, watch for grammar errors and poor English, ignore requests to reply with "STOP," and report suspected scams to BBB.org/ScamTracker.
kwch.com · 2025-12-08
Scammers are sending sextortion emails that include photos of victims' homes (obtained from Google Street View) and falsely claim to have installed malware, recorded compromising videos, and stolen passwords, demanding Bitcoin payment within a short timeframe. The scam exploits personal information from data breaches and uses intimidation tactics, but the threats are not genuine—scammers have no actual videos or camera access. Victims should not pay, report the emails to the FBI's Internet Crime Division at IC3.gov, monitor their credit for fraud, and ignore all communication from the scammers.
kashmirobserver.net · 2025-12-08
India's CERT-In cyber-security agency issued a public advisory detailing over a dozen online scams targeting citizens, with particular focus on the "digital arrest" scam where fraudsters impersonate government officials via WhatsApp or Skype, threatening victims with arrest to coerce them into transferring money under false pretenses of investigations or security deposits. Prime Minister Narendra Modi simultaneously warned the public about these scams in his radio address, recommending citizens verify agency identity directly, avoid panic-driven money transfers, and report incidents to the national cyber-security helpline (1930) or www.cybercrime.gov.in. The advisory also highlighted other prevalent scams including phishing,
futurism.com · 2025-12-08
Scammers attempted to defraud a Florida title company by using an AI-generated deepfake video to impersonate a missing woman and fraudulently sell a vacant property. The scheme was caught before completion, but property appraiser Marty Kiar warns that AI-enabled title fraud will likely increase as criminals leverage automated tools to synthesize public property records and create sophisticated impersonations faster than ever before.
businessday.ng · 2025-12-08
Internet scams are a global concern causing significant financial losses and erosion of trust in digital transactions. India recorded $7.93 million USD in cybercrime losses across 4,850 cases in 2023, while Brazil experienced 1.8 million banking trojan infections the same year; Pakistan reported 32,072 suspicious transactions, and South Africa ranks 7th globally for cyber criminality, with identity theft and phishing attacks being prevalent across all regions. Governments are implementing awareness campaigns and stronger cybersecurity measures, but rapid digital infrastructure growth continues to outpace law enforcement efforts to combat evolving scam tactics.
presidentialprayerteam.org · 2025-12-08
The FTC reported that older adults lost over $1.9 billion to fraud in 2023, though actual losses may exceed $61.5 billion, with seniors over 80 particularly vulnerable to tech support, lottery, family impersonation, and investment scams. The FTC's Scams Against Older Adults Advisory Group, established under the 2022 Stop Senior Scams Act, is working through enforcement, rulemaking, and outreach to disrupt these scams and improve consumer education. Bank transfers and cryptocurrency were identified as the most common payment methods used by fraudsters targeting seniors.
arstechnica.com · 2025-12-08
Scammers are using AI voice-cloning technology to impersonate police officials in extortion schemes, with recent incidents in Salt Lake City and Tulsa targeting residents with fake videos and calls claiming victims owed money to the federal government. The Salt Lake City Police Department documented a scam featuring AI-generated audio mimicking Police Chief Mike Brown spliced with real footage, while Tulsa experienced similar phone calls impersonating a local officer. Though these AI-generated messages contain detectable flaws such as unnatural speech patterns and odd emphasis, security experts warn that advancing technology could make such scams increasingly difficult to distinguish from legitimate communications.
theconversation.com · 2025-12-08
Fraud is now the leading crime against Canadian seniors, with scammers increasingly exploiting technological tools to create more sophisticated schemes including grandparent fraud (2,494 victims, $9.4 million in losses), romance scams ($59 million in 2022), and phishing attacks ($58 million in 2022). Seniors are particularly vulnerable due to social isolation, limited digital literacy (only 26% feel confident with technology), accessible savings, and the emotional manipulation that can override caution despite public awareness campaigns.
hindustantimes.com · 2025-12-08
Indians lost ₹120.3 crore in digital arrest frauds during the first quarter of 2024, with 46% of digital fraud cases—including digital arrests, trading scams, investment scams, and romance scams—originating from Myanmar, Laos, and Cambodia, affecting victims who lost a cumulative ₹1,776 crore. Digital arrest scams involve fraudsters impersonating law enforcement via video call, claiming victims are involved in crimes or have received illegal parcels, and demanding money to close fabricated cases. Complaint numbers have increased significantly from 4.52 lakh in 2021 to 7.4 lakh in the
bbc.com · 2025-12-08
BBC Scam Safe Week is a multi-platform educational initiative launching programs across television, radio, and online to help the public recognize and avoid scams, which have become increasingly prevalent during the cost-of-living crisis. Expert contributors highlight that "pig butchering" romance-to-investment scams are currently the most profitable fraud scheme, with victims losing tens of thousands of pounds or more, and emphasize that people of all ages—particularly 16-34 year-olds—are vulnerable targets. The campaign stresses that self-education is essential since authorities can only convict 0.1% of fraud cases, and that scamming has become a sophisticated criminal enterprise rather than isolated incidents.
bbc.com · 2025-12-08
The BBC is launching "Scam Safe Week" (November 23-29, 2024), a multi-platform educational initiative featuring TV, radio, and online content designed to help the public recognize and prevent scams. With fraud now comprising over 40% of all crime in the UK, the week will include the TV-BAFTA winning series "Scam Interceptors," live roadshow events across the country, and expert advice from fraud specialists, in partnership with organizations including Age UK and Stop Scams UK.
bilyonaryo.com · 2025-12-08
Fraud against seniors in Canada is rapidly increasing and now represents the leading crime against this population, driven by sophisticated technologies including voice simulation, AI-generated profiles, and automated phishing systems. Seniors are particularly vulnerable due to social isolation, limited digital literacy (only 26% feel confident with technology), and accessible savings, making them targets for scams like grandparent fraud ($9.4 million in losses), romance scams ($59 million in 2022), and phishing ($58 million in 2022). To protect themselves, seniors should never share personal information via unsolicited calls or messages, verify requests independently, and remain cautious of emotional appeals even when awareness campaigns exist.
interest.co.nz · 2025-12-08
Fraud is now the leading crime against seniors in Canada, with scammers increasingly exploiting advanced technology including voice simulation, AI, and fake identities to conduct grandparent scams, romance fraud, and phishing schemes. Notable losses include $9.4 million from grandparent fraud and $59 million from romance scams in 2022 alone. Seniors remain vulnerable due to social isolation, limited digital literacy (only 26% feel confident with technology despite 67% using the internet), and scammers' ability to create emotionally manipulative scenarios that override caution and awareness campaigns.
abc7.com · 2025-12-08
Older adults in Laguna Hills attended a fraud awareness seminar hosted by Age Well Senior Services where they learned to recognize common scams including tech support, lottery, romance, and sweepstakes schemes. The Federal Trade Commission reports seniors lost over $1.9 billion to fraud last year, though estimates suggest the actual figure may reach $62 billion when unreported cases are included. Experts emphasized that scams typically begin with unsolicited contact and advised seniors not to answer calls from unknown numbers and to report suspected fraud to Adult Protective Services or local law enforcement.
foxnews.com · 2025-12-08
Scammers in 2024 frequently impersonate celebrities through deepfakes and fake endorsements to defraud victims, with Scarlett Johansson, Kylie Jenner, and Taylor Swift being the top targets according to cybersecurity firm McAfee. Common scams include unauthorized use of celebrities' names and likenesses to promote fake products (health cures, cosmetics, cryptocurrency), ticket fraud, giveaway schemes, and false political endorsements. To protect yourself, verify celebrity endorsements through official channels, be skeptical of unsolicited ads using celebrity images, and report suspected scams to relevant platforms and authorities.
indianexpress.com · 2025-12-08
Bharti Airtel chairman Sunil Mittal revealed that scammers are using AI voice cloning technology to impersonate executives and request money transfers, with the cloned voices being remarkably convincing. AI voice cloning scams have successfully defrauded victims of thousands to over 100,000 rupees by impersonating family members, law enforcement officials, or government agencies and creating false urgency around arrests or emergencies. The article advises victims to verify caller identity through country code checks (+91 for legitimate Indian officials), direct contact with the person allegedly in distress, and awareness that legitimate officials will not demand immediate money transfers or claim "digital arrests."
twistedsifter.com · 2025-12-08
A phishing scam targets Microsoft and Gmail users through fraudulent emails claiming to detect unusual login activity. Clicking the malicious link in these emails allows hackers to wipe the user's phone, steal personal information, and commit identity theft. Users can safely verify account activity by logging directly into their email security settings rather than clicking email links.
dailypioneer.com · 2025-12-08
A "digital arrest" scam is rapidly spreading across India, where fraudsters impersonate police officers and convince victims they face legal charges, demanding money to drop fabricated cases. The scheme exploits fear and confusion by using deepfake technology, fake credentials, and authoritative impersonation to appear legitimate, with Prime Minister Modi issuing a national warning and clarifying that "digital arrest" does not exist under Indian law. Victims are advised to avoid panic, record interactions when possible, and immediately report incidents to cyber helplines and local police, while the government is urged to strengthen cybersecurity efforts and enforcement to combat the growing threat.
theglobeandmail.com · 2025-12-08
Business impersonation scams were the most reported financial fraud in 2023, affecting approximately 332,000 victims and resulting in over $660 million in losses, according to an FTC report. These scams involve fraudsters impersonating legitimate companies or government agencies to deceive victims into revealing sensitive information, transferring money, or granting system access. Protection strategies include scrutinizing sender email addresses, being wary of urgent-sounding messages, enabling multi-factor authentication, monitoring financial accounts closely, and reporting suspected fraud to the FTC.
whatsupnewp.com · 2025-12-08
**Summary:** U.S. Rep. Gabe Amo requested assistance from the Federal Trade Commission to address elder fraud in Rhode Island, which ranked among the top ten states for increased elder fraud between 2022 and 2023. Amo asked the FTC for legislative guidance, support for a state awareness event, and additional consumer education materials, citing that fraudulent activities targeting seniors are becoming increasingly prevalent, costly, and sophisticated despite existing prevention efforts.
intelligentciso.com · 2025-12-08
Proofpoint researchers documented a rising trend of cryptocurrency scams targeting job seekers through fake employment offers, often impersonating legitimate companies and communicated via social media, SMS, and messaging apps. These "Pig Butchering" variant scams exploit psychological vulnerabilities to pressure victims into making payments after performing fake tasks, with one fraudulent website impersonating Daptone Records netting over $300,000 in two months. To protect themselves, job seekers should remain skeptical of unsolicited offers, never send money to supposed employers, and verify opportunities through official company channels.
usatoday.com · 2025-12-08
Americans lost an estimated $12.5 billion to online scams in the past year, with the FBI reporting that 39% of victims were targeted through AI-generated "deepfake" videos used in investment schemes, romance scams, and other frauds. Scammers are increasingly using artificial intelligence to duplicate voices, create convincing fake videos of business leaders and celebrities, and attempt account breaches, making these crimes harder to detect and recover from, as 96% of reported losses are never recovered. The article recommends using strong passwords, two-factor authentication, and watching for telltale signs of deepfakes such as unnatural facial movements, inconsistent lighting, and audio irreg
sbs.com.au · 2025-12-08
Scam-related complaints to Australia's Financial Complaints Authority surged 81 percent in 2023-24, with nearly 11,000 complaints filed, as Australians lost a combined $2.7 billion to various fraud schemes including phishing, spoofing, bank impersonation, romance, and investment scams. The report also found financial hardship complaints rose 18 percent amid cost of living pressures, with First Nations people experiencing disproportionate impacts due to systemic barriers including limited digital access and reduced banking services in regional areas. Many victims never recover their lost funds, and financial hardship complainants often face slow or inadequate responses from institutions.
ceotodaymagazine.com · 2025-12-08
Cybersecurity Awareness Month highlights the critical importance of protecting against cyber threats, which are predicted to cost the global economy over $6 trillion in 2024. The article outlines common scams including phishing, spear phishing, tech support fraud, online shopping scams, investment scams, ransomware, romance scams, and lottery schemes. Key protective measures include educating yourself and others, using strong unique passwords, enabling two-factor authentication, verifying sender information, and remaining vigilant about unsolicited requests for personal information.
wkbw.com · 2025-12-08
An educational forum held at Southern Chautauqua Federal Credit Union in Lakewood, New York reviewed common scams targeting older adults, who lost $3 billion to fraud in the previous year according to the FBI. The session covered gift card scams, holiday shopping fraud, romance scams, AI-enabled impersonation scams, and political donation scams, offering prevention tips such as purchasing gift cards at checkout, avoiding suspicious links, ignoring payment requests from strangers online, verifying callers through specific photo requests, and declining unsolicited donation calls. Authorities advised against sharing personal information on social media, as it increases vulnerability to password guessing and impersonation.
unilad.com · 2025-12-08
I don't see an article to summarize in your message. You've provided what appears to be a website navigation menu, but no actual content about scams, fraud, elder abuse, or related topics. Please paste the full article text or transcript you'd like me to summarize, and I'll provide a 2-3 sentence summary following the Elderus database format (focusing on what happened, who was affected, the type of scam, dollar amounts, and outcomes).
timesleader.net · 2025-12-08
During election season, scammers exploit heightened political emotions through donation fraud via emails, phone calls, and social media. A west Kentucky resident reported receiving 10-20 fraudulent political donation emails daily from imposters posing as campaigns, though she avoided falling victim. The Better Business Bureau warns voters to avoid unsolicited links, pushy requests for personal information, phony donation calls offering rewards, and pop-up donations on social media—and advises researching campaigns, avoiding rushing donations, and never sharing sensitive data like Social Security numbers or birth dates with survey takers.
justice.gov · 2025-12-08
Everette Jhamal Thibou, 32, of Tampa, Florida, was sentenced to 168 months in prison as the sixth defendant in an international fraud scheme that defrauded 50 elderly victims of $11 million across West Michigan and the country. The scam used fake virus warnings and impersonations of tech companies and federal agents to trick victims into sending cash, wire transfers, and gift cards through various methods. Thibou and five other U.S.-based defendants collected fraud proceeds on behalf of scammers located in India, with a seventh defendant still at large.
regtechtimes.com · 2025-12-08
Three Georgia residents—Patrick Dallas, Stacey Robinson, and Owen Demoy Byfield—were charged in federal court for operating a sweepstakes fraud scheme targeting seniors across at least ten states, including Rhode Island, stealing at least $1 million. The fraudsters impersonated Publishers Clearing House representatives, convincing victims they had won large prizes and pressuring them to pay upfront fees via cash, gift cards, or valuable items; one 77-year-old Rhode Island victim nearly lost $163,000 before a FedEx employee's intervention alerted him to the scam. The defendants face charges for conspiracy to commit mail and wire fraud, as well as money laundering
ncoa.org · 2025-12-08
Deepfakes are AI-generated videos, photos, and audio that realistically fabricate or alter someone's likeness, increasingly used by criminals to execute scams targeting older Americans, who lost $3.4 billion to fraud in 2023. Common deepfake scams include investment schemes (such as an 82-year-old losing $690,000 to a fake Elon Musk video), romance scams (with victims in Hong Kong losing over $46 million), political misinformation, extortion/grandparent scams (which generated over $13 million in losses from 2020-2021), and celebrity endorsement frauds. Understanding
sbs.com.au · 2025-12-08
The Australian Competition and Consumer Commission is suing telecommunications company Optus for engaging in unconscionable conduct by selling unwanted phone products to hundreds of vulnerable customers, including First Nations people from remote areas and individuals with disabilities or financial disadvantages, then pursuing them for resulting debts. Additionally, scam-related complaints in Australia reached a record high, with an 81% increase in complaints to the Australian Financial Complaints Authority in 2023-2024, with phishing, spoofing, remote access scams, bank impersonation scams, and romance scams being the most prevalent types.
ncoa.org · 2025-12-08
AI-powered scams represent an emerging threat to consumers, particularly older adults, utilizing artificial intelligence tools to create highly convincing impersonations and fraudulent messages at scale. Scammers employ four main tactics: voice cloning to impersonate family members or authority figures, deepfake videos to pose as public figures, sophisticated phishing emails that bypass spam filters, and fake websites promoting fraudulent investments. The FBI has warned that as AI technology advances, cybercriminals' ability to execute personalized, authentic-seeming fraud campaigns will continue to increase.
forbes.com · 2025-12-08
Baby boomers are increasingly returning to work in various capacities rather than fully retiring, creating demand for financial services tailored to gig work and consulting income. Simultaneously, elder financial fraud has become a critical issue, with Americans over 60 losing over $38 billion in 2023 to financial exploitation—triple the 2022 amount—with tech support scams being the most common type reported. Adult children are increasingly taking on responsibility for managing aging parents' finances, with 80% of consumers interested in digital tools that provide fraud alerts, spending controls, and financial monitoring, representing a potential $2 billion annual revenue opportunity for financial institutions offering Senior Financial Management services.