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in Government Impersonation
yahoo.com
· 2025-12-08
Cybersecurity researcher David Maimon discovered scammers selling access to Social Security accounts online, with the goal of taking over victims' benefit payments by changing account details and redirecting funds to fraudulent accounts. Scammers gain access through stolen login credentials and phishing attempts, and the Social Security Administration is implementing new in-person identity verification requirements (as of April 14) to combat the fraud. To protect accounts, beneficiaries should regularly monitor their "my Social Security" accounts, avoid clicking suspicious links, enable two-factor authentication, and never provide cash or personal information to unsolicited callers claiming to be law enforcement.
bangaloremirror.indiatimes.com
· 2025-12-08
The Karnataka Criminal Investigation Department released a report revealing that cybercriminals tailor scams to exploit specific age groups' vulnerabilities: young adults (18-20) are targeted with fake job offers, working professionals (30-45) with investment and crypto scams, and senior citizens (50-70) with digital arrest threats impersonating law enforcement. Karnataka receives 100-200 cybercrime reports daily, with metro cities accounting for 20% of India's cybercrime cases, prompting authorities to intensify awareness campaigns and deploy advanced technological tools to combat the rising white-collar crime.
deccanherald.com
· 2025-12-08
This article highlights a digital literacy initiative designed to educate elderly individuals about cybercrime threats, with emphasis on understanding One-Time Passwords (OTPs), recognizing digital arrest scams, practicing safe payment methods, and avoiding suspicious apps and links. The push aims to increase awareness and protective behaviors among seniors facing growing online fraud risks.
wired.com
· 2025-12-08
This article is a cybersecurity news roundup covering government and infrastructure threats rather than elder fraud specifically. Key topics include NSO Group's lobbying efforts despite a US blacklist, Chinese hacking of US infrastructure, recruitment of federal employees by Chinese intelligence, DHS monitoring of immigrants' social media, and Trump's investigation of former CISA director Chris Krebs. None of these items involve elder fraud, scams targeting seniors, or elder abuse.
cowboystatedaily.com
· 2025-12-08
Employer impersonation scams and company spoofing fraud are increasingly prevalent in Wyoming, with scammers using stolen logos, emails, and AI-generated content to impersonate legitimate companies like PayPal, Amazon, USPS, and Best Buy's Geek Squad. The scams typically trick victims into clicking malicious links or submitting personal and banking information by exploiting psychological vulnerabilities through fear, emotions, and false job opportunities offering high pay. Experts recommend never clicking links in unsolicited emails or texts and instead verifying directly with companies through their official websites.
nypost.com
· 2025-12-08
NYC radio host and City Council candidate Frank Morano admitted he wrote a parole letter recommending the release of Robert Giuliano, 49, a convicted romance scam artist, after being manipulated through flattery by the ex-con. After Giuliano's June 2023 release, he immediately resumed his schemes—defrauding travelers with a fake concierge service and targeting women—before being arrested in Arizona in December 2023 and extradited to New York as a fugitive. Morano acknowledged being "duped" by a "professional con artist" and vowed never to help prisoners again, though he characterized the resurfaced story as a political smear attack
fingerlakes1.com
· 2025-12-08
Scammers are stealing Social Security account credentials through phishing attacks and selling full access on the dark web, then rerouting benefit payments to fraudulent accounts—with the SSA reporting cases involving monthly benefits of $1,855 or more being diverted. The Social Security Administration is implementing new in-person identity verification requirements starting April 2025, though this faces criticism due to concurrent staffing cuts of nearly 12%. Protection strategies include enabling two-factor authentication, regularly monitoring accounts, avoiding phishing links, freezing credit, and reporting suspected fraud to the SSA Office of the Inspector General.
markets.financialcontent.com
· 2025-12-08
Karina Singer is pursuing a Nevada Supreme Court appeal (Case No. 89171) involving allegations of elder financial abuse, fiduciary misconduct, and over $1 million in improper trust asset distributions from her late father Steven J. Singer's estate. The case was transferred from the Nevada Supreme Court to the Court of Appeals without addressing Singer's pending motions and evidence, which she contends violated appellate procedure rules and constitutional due process protections. Singer has filed an emergency motion to recall the transfer and retain jurisdiction, arguing the Supreme Court has a mandatory obligation to address the uncontested allegations of judicial misconduct and systemic failures in Nevada's probate system.
standardspeaker.com
· 2025-12-08
This article is an educational advice column, not a fraud or elder abuse case. It provides seniors with legitimate strategies to reduce auto insurance premiums, including increasing deductibles, adjusting coverage on older vehicles, taking defensive driving courses, reporting low mileage, bundling policies, enrolling in driver monitoring programs, seeking membership discounts, improving credit scores, and comparison shopping among insurers. The advice is aimed at helping older drivers manage rising insurance costs, particularly after age 70 when premiums typically increase.
paymentsjournal.com
· 2025-12-08
Consumers face increasingly common scams such as fake toll bill texts and fraudulent service provider listings, yet many financial institutions fail to adequately budget for scam prevention and detection technology. While the Federal Reserve's free ScamClassifier system helps standardize fraud documentation and tracking, many banks remain unaware of or reluctant to adopt it due to the significant integration costs and legacy system modifications required. The article emphasizes that prioritizing fraud prevention in organizational budgets is essential to combating the growing sophistication and persistence of scam tactics.
patch.com
· 2025-12-08
San Ramon student Adya Gupta founded Impactt Kids, a volunteer-driven nonprofit that provides scam education training to seniors and caregivers to help them recognize and avoid phone and internet fraud. The initiative, inspired by Gupta's grandmother who frequently receives scam calls, has trained seniors at local living centers on identifying scam calls, phishing emails, and fraudulent IRS, Medicare, and lottery schemes, with participants reporting successful fraud prevention as a result. The program plans to expand by integrating AI-powered scam detection tools and establishing a hotline for seniors to verify suspicious calls.
aol.com
· 2025-12-08
Criminals are increasingly targeting older adults by directing them to cryptocurrency ATMs to deposit funds, with the FTC reporting a tenfold increase in losses since 2020 and Rhode Island State Police documenting cases rising from 3 in 2023 to 40 in 2024 and 23 in the first three months of 2025—all victims over age 50, with individual losses ranging from $15,000 to $40,000. Crypto ATMs are attractive to scammers because victims are unfamiliar with them, there are no daily transaction limits, and cryptocurrency's decentralized nature makes funds nearly impossible to recover, unlike
wdrb.com
· 2025-12-08
A Louisville man lost $1,500 in a rental scam after finding a fraudulent one-bedroom listing on Facebook Marketplace for $650 per month; the scammer posed as a landlord, requested payment via electronic transfer, and disappeared after receiving the deposit. Scammers increasingly copy photos from legitimate rental listings, obtain property access codes from real estate agents, and use sophisticated tactics to appear legitimate. The FTC warns renters to be suspicious of landlords who demand deposits before in-person meetings, restrict property access, or request payment through digital transfer services like Zelle, Venmo, or gift cards.
wnyt.com
· 2025-12-08
The Better Business Bureau warned consumers about tax scams ahead of the April 18 filing deadline, noting that scammers frequently impersonate the IRS to steal personal information and money. The BBB emphasized that the actual IRS only initiates contact through mail, never via phone, email, or text, and recommended using only reputable tax preparers and reporting suspicious activity to the BBB or FTC.
wired.com
· 2025-12-08
Chinese-speaking smishing syndicates have operated the world's largest text message phishing operation over the past three years, sending millions of fraudulent SMS messages impersonating postal services, tax authorities, and financial institutions to steal personal information and bank card details. The criminals use realistic fake websites and harvest one-time passwords to clone cards into digital wallets like Apple Pay and Google Wallet, with one major group (the Smishing Triad) impersonating brands in at least 121 countries and generating over 1 million page visits to scam sites in a single 20-day period. These sophisticated, well-organized syndicates continue to develop new techniques and sell their ph
newsbreak.com
· 2025-12-08
Henry Collins, a 53-year-old Philadelphia man, pleaded guilty to conspiring to defraud the IRS through a payroll tax evasion scheme at Davis Brothers Chimney Sweep & Masonry in Egg Harbor Township, New Jersey, between 2018 and 2024. Collins and the business owner's spouse converted company receipts into cash through a check-cashing service to pay employees off-the-books while filing false tax returns, resulting in approximately $1 million in tax losses. Collins faces up to five years in prison and a $250,000 fine at sentencing scheduled for August 2025.
beacononlinenews.com
· 2025-12-08
Florida residents lost $866 million to scams and fraud in 2024, with the state ranking first nationally for fraud victimization at 2,163 cases per 100,000 residents according to FTC data. The article highlights that fraudsters are systematically targeting Florida citizens, causing significant financial harm across the state.
investopedia.com
· 2025-12-08
This educational article explains romance scams, which involve scammers creating fake dating profiles to build romantic relationships with victims—particularly older Americans—before requesting money for fabricated emergencies or opportunities. Older people are targeted because they typically have more savings, less familiarity with online scams, and may experience isolation, making them vulnerable to the emotional manipulation of promised romantic connections. The article provides guidance for adult children whose parents fall victim, including stopping communications, reporting to authorities and platforms, attempting to recover funds through banks and financial institutions, and protecting against identity theft.
newschannel5.com
· 2025-12-08
**Summary:**
Scammers are using AI voice-cloning technology to impersonate family members in phone calls to elderly grandparents, requesting money in urgent situations. Consumer Reports found that four of six popular voice-cloning apps lacked meaningful consent safeguards, and deepfake technology has become so advanced that even experts struggle to detect it. Protection measures include enabling two-factor authentication on financial accounts, verifying unexpected calls through other means, and maintaining healthy skepticism about requests for personal or financial information.
esecurityplanet.com
· 2025-12-08
Unable to provide a summary. This content is a directory or index page listing cybersecurity topics and resources (e.g., firewall solutions, threat intelligence platforms, network security guides) rather than a specific article about elder fraud, scams, or elder abuse. It does not contain information relevant to the Elderus database.
channelstv.com
· 2025-12-08
Nigerian music star Peter Okoye (Mr P) testified in Federal High Court that his elder brother and former manager Jude Okoye allegedly misappropriated over two decades of P-Square group earnings by secretly registering a company (Northside Music Limited) to control digital royalties without consent, manipulating backend data to reduce catalogue value from $8,000 to $500 monthly, and converting over $1 million through suspicious financial channels. Jude is facing seven charges including money laundering violations related to an ₦850 million property purchase and currency conversion, and has pleaded not guilty; Peter stated the lack of financial transparency cost the group both revenue and business opportunities
justice.gov
· 2025-12-08
Tyler, Texas tax preparer Karistha Johnson, 38, was sentenced to 24 months in federal prison for filing over 610 fraudulent tax returns between 2017-2019 that fabricated deductions and business expenses to generate $1.2 million in false refunds. Johnson was ordered to pay $1,244,934 in restitution for exploiting clients who sought her tax preparation services.
munsifdaily.com
· 2025-12-08
A Maharashtra government employee, Shridhar Mahuli, lost Rs 2 lakh (approximately $2,400 USD) after a scammer impersonating an AU Small Finance Bank representative called claiming a health insurance payment needed to be linked to his credit card. The fraudster obtained Mahuli's card details through the fake call and made multiple unauthorized transactions, highlighting the sophistication of identity spoofing tactics used by modern scammers targeting financial information.
uk.news.yahoo.com
· 2025-12-08
Zak Coyne, 24, from Huddersfield, was sentenced to eight-and-a-half years in prison for operating LabHost, a sophisticated subscription-based website that enabled over 2,000 cybercriminals to defraud approximately one million victims across 91 countries of at least £100 million (with £32 million from the UK alone). LabHost hosted phishing pages mimicking 185 major banks and commercial websites, allowing subscribers to steal login credentials from unsuspecting victims, and Coyne personally profited around £200,000 in cryptocurrency from the criminal subscriptions before the platform was shut down in April 2024
michigan.gov
· 2025-12-08
Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel and State Transportation Director Bradley C. Wieferich warned consumers about an increasing toll scam in West Michigan involving fraudulent text messages falsely claiming recipients owe unpaid tolls to MDOT and threatening legal action. The scam uses deceptive links mimicking the official MDOT website, though legitimate toll bills are only sent by mail—never via text—and Michigan has no toll roads except at three specific bridge facilities. Consumers are advised to ignore unsolicited texts with urgency language, suspicious links, and requests for financial information, and to report such "smishing" texts to SPAM (7726) and the Federal Trade Commission.
publicnewsservice.org
· 2025-12-08
Policy changes to Social Security's appointment requirements have created confusion among Virginians that may increase vulnerability to scams, which typically begin with urgent-sounding phone calls, texts, or emails falsely claiming to be from the Social Security Administration. Over 1.6 million Virginians depend on Social Security benefits, and proposed in-person-only signup requirements would have particularly burdened seniors, especially the 9% of Virginia seniors living more than 45 miles from the nearest Social Security office.
komu.com
· 2025-12-08
Tax season scams spike around Tax Day, with fraudsters impersonating IRS officials, posing as "ghost preparers," and using phishing emails and threatening calls to target filers. The IRS reminds taxpayers that legitimate communication comes only via U.S. mail, never through unsolicited calls, texts, or emails, and the agency never demands payment via gift cards or cryptocurrency. Filers should work with reputable tax professionals, verify charity solicitations with the IRS, and those needing more time can file for an extension by April 15 to gain until October 15 to complete their return.
states.aarp.org
· 2025-12-08
**Social Security Imposter Scams on the Rise**
Government imposter scams, particularly those posing as Social Security Administration officials, represent one of the most common fraud schemes targeting consumers, with the Social Security OIG receiving 73,626 reports in 2023—a 13.7% increase from the previous year. Scammers contact victims via phone, text, or email claiming account problems, benefit suspensions, or legal threats, then demand immediate payment or personal information through threats of arrest or account seizure. The Social Security Administration never initiates contact unexpectedly, communicates changes by mail, and never demands immediate payment via gift card, cryptocurrency, or cash—
cnet.com
· 2025-12-08
American consumers lost $470 million to text message scams in 2024, a 26% increase from 2023 and five-fold jump from 2020, according to FTC data. The most common scams involved package-delivery impersonation, fake job offers, fraudulent fraud alerts, and romance schemes, with criminals exploiting the difficulty of detecting scam links in text messages compared to emails. Consumers are advised to avoid clicking unsolicited links, use text filters, and report suspicious messages to their carriers and the FTC.
cordcuttersnews.com
· 2025-12-08
AARP, Amazon, Google, and Walmart launched the National Elder Fraud Coordination Center (NEFCC), a public-private partnership designed to combat elder fraud through coordinated investigation, pattern identification, and prosecution of fraud rings targeting older Americans. The FTC estimated elder fraud cost older consumers $61.5 billion in 2023—approximately $117,000 per minute—with common scams including robocalls, tech support schemes, and deceptive location data collection. Led by former FBI Supervisory Special Agent Brady Finta, the NEFCC will share resources across sectors to help law enforcement agencies identify and shut down larger fraud operations while returning stolen assets to victims.
states.aarp.org
· 2025-12-08
On April 16, AARP, Amazon, Google, and Walmart launched the National Elder Fraud Coordination Center (NEFCC), a nonprofit organization designed to combat fraud targeting older adults by coordinating efforts among law enforcement, industry, government, and academia. The center will track and assess patterns of alleged criminal fraud to help combat criminal organizations that defraud Americans of billions of dollars annually.
press.aarp.org
· 2025-12-08
AARP, Amazon, Google, and Walmart launched the National Elder Fraud Coordination Center (NEFCC) in April 2025, a nonprofit organization designed to coordinate law enforcement, industry, government, and academia in combating fraud targeting older adults. The center will leverage private sector data to identify patterns across elder fraud cases nationwide, helping law enforcement dismantle large-scale criminal fraud operations; according to the FTC, older Americans lost as much as $61.5 billion to fraud in 2023 alone. NEFCC is led by Brady Finta, a former FBI Supervisory Special Agent with over 20 years of experience in organized crime and elder fraud investigation.
legit.ng
· 2025-12-08
A Nigerian doctor nearly lost $250 (approximately N400,000) to scammers who impersonated an international organization on social media, using tactics including fake credentials, high-follower profiles, and fabricated official documents. He avoided the loss by becoming suspicious when the contact repeatedly claimed to be unavailable by phone, and after consulting a friend working at a legitimate multilateral organization who confirmed it was a scam. The incident highlighted how scammers research victims' interests and vulnerabilities over time to create convincing fraudulent schemes.
reviewjournal.com
· 2025-12-08
This educational piece advises seniors on protecting themselves from identity theft by placing either a fraud alert or credit freeze on their credit files with the three major credit reporting bureaus (Equifax, Experian, and TransUnion). A credit freeze provides stronger protection by restricting access to credit reports and preventing new accounts from being opened in one's name, though it temporarily prevents the account holder from obtaining new credit themselves. Both protections are free, do not affect credit scores, and can be easily set up by contacting any of the three bureaus by phone, online, or mail.
fox8live.com
· 2025-12-08
A 75-year-old Louisiana woman fell victim to a Social Security scam after receiving official-looking mail claiming she needed to submit personal information by a deadline to keep her benefits; the fraudulent letters contained her Social Security number but had telltale signs of forgery including grammatical errors and inconsistent fonts. The Social Security Administration reports that scammers impersonate it more than any other government agency, with over 260,000 fraud reports last year, primarily targeting seniors aged 65 and older through mail and phone calls. Experts advise verifying any SSA correspondence and note that the legitimate SSA will not call or email citizens unsolicited.
thegermanyeye.com
· 2025-12-08
An 84-year-old woman, featured in a Netflix documentary about her fraud schemes, appeared in a Singapore court via video link from a police station, appearing in a wheelchair and struggling to comprehend the proceedings without legal representation. The case highlights concerns about her mental and physical capacity to participate in judicial proceedings and raises broader questions about the legal system's ability to protect vulnerable individuals and fairly treat elderly offenders involved in elaborate fraud schemes.
akronlegalnews.com
· 2025-12-08
A FINRA Investor Education Foundation study of 905 fraud victims (mean age 75) identified by the U.S. Postal Inspection Service found that older adults are more vulnerable to opportunity-based scams (prize, product, and investment fraud) when they engage in high-exposure activities like opening junk mail, entering sweepstakes, and answering unknown calls. Key vulnerability factors include older age, loneliness, financial fragility, and risky financial behaviors, leading FINRA to recommend educational programs addressing loneliness, financial literacy, telemarketing exposure reduction, and distinguishing legitimate from fake lotteries and sweepstakes.
justice.gov
· 2025-12-08
A 28-year-old man from China named Dongyi Guo was sentenced to 21 months in prison and ordered to repay $95,000 after stealing that amount from a 79-year-old Missouri woman as part of a coordinated wire fraud conspiracy. Guo and his co-conspirators posed as financial institution and Social Security representatives, falsely claiming the victim's accounts were compromised and pressuring her to withdraw cash in multiple pickups between March 4-7, 2024. The victim's daughter reported in court that her mother died seven months later, stating the crime "unquestionably contributed" to her death, as the victim became mentally
fiftyplusadvocate.com
· 2025-12-08
Cryptocurrency ATMs have become a prevalent tool for scammers targeting older adults, with the FTC reporting $65 million in fraud losses through Bitcoin ATMs in the first half of 2024 alone—$46 million from victims aged 60 and older. Scammers use these unregulated kiosks in various schemes including romance and grandparent scams to trick victims into depositing cash. AARP Massachusetts is advocating for legislation requiring cryptocurrency ATM operator licensing, daily transaction limits, fraud warning notices, and consumer education to strengthen protections for residents.
aol.com
· 2025-12-08
Christine Joan Echohawk, a 53-year-old Oklahoma woman, created multiple fake male personas (Jason Morris, Edward Lotts, Glenn Goadard) to conduct a months-long romance scam that defrauded four senior women ages 64-79 of $1.5 million. The victims were manipulated into sending money under false pretenses (oil rig rescue, financial portfolio management, relationship promises), with one woman selling her paid-off home and sending over $600,000; Echohawk laundered the funds through multiple bank accounts, cryptocurrency, and gift cards until MidFirst Bank flagged a suspicious transaction in January 2025, leading to her
investopedia.com
· 2025-12-08
**Article:** "The Surprising Truth About the Age Group Most Likely to Fall for Financial Fraud"
Recent FTC data reveals that younger adults (ages 20-29) are losing money to scams at nearly twice the rate of older adults, with 44% experiencing financial losses compared to 24% of those aged 70-79. Younger adults are primarily targeted through online scams including fake shopping sites, cryptocurrency fraud, and social media job offers, with their "digital native" status and tendency toward impulsive decision-making making them particularly vulnerable despite overconfidence in their tech savviness. The study emphasizes that scammers exploit age-specific psychological factors and online
yahoo.com
· 2025-12-08
A 53-year-old Oklahoma woman, Christine Joan Echohawk, posed as multiple men (Jason Morris, Edward Lotts, and Glenn Goadard) in an elaborate romance scam that defrauded four senior women, ages 64-79, of $1.5 million between late 2024 and January 2025. The victims were manipulated into sending money under false pretenses including oil rig rescues and financial portfolio management, with one victim selling her paid-off home to send over $600,000; Echohawk laundered the funds through multiple accounts, cryptocurrency, and gift cards before being caught when a bank flagged a suspicious transaction. She
uk.news.yahoo.com
· 2025-12-08
A 53-year-old Oklahoma woman, Christine Joan Echohawk, posed as multiple men (Jason Morris, Edward Lotts, and Glenn Goadard) in an elaborate romance scam that defrauded four senior women aged 64-79 of $1.5 million between late 2024 and January 2025. The victims were manipulated into sending money under false pretenses including oil rig rescues, financial portfolio management, and promises of future cohabitation; Echohawk laundered the funds through multiple bank accounts, cryptocurrency, and gift cards before being caught when a $120,000 transaction was flagged by MidFirst Bank. She now
lexology.com
· 2025-12-08
In 2024, text message scams caused $470 million in reported losses to consumers—more than five times the 2020 amount—according to FTC data, with the top five scams being fake package delivery notices, phony job offers, fraudulent fraud alerts, bogus toll notifications, and "wrong number" romance/investment schemes. These scams employed tactics such as impersonating legitimate companies, stealing financial information through fake fees, and building fake relationships to manipulate victims into transferring money. The FTC recommends consumers avoid clicking links or responding to unsolicited texts and use blocking tools to prevent fraud.
thv11.com
· 2025-12-08
Scammers are increasingly using AI voice-cloning technology to create deepfakes that impersonate loved ones in emergency scams, asking victims to send money immediately. Consumer Reports found that four of six popular voice-cloning apps lacked meaningful consent protections, allowing users to clone voices without permission, and experts say these deepfakes are becoming difficult to distinguish from real audio. Protection measures include recognizing deepfake scams exist, enabling two-factor authentication on financial accounts, being suspicious of unsolicited requests for personal or financial information, and applying critical thinking before responding to unexpected calls or messages.
ftc.gov
· 2025-12-08
In 2024, reported text scam losses reached $470 million—more than five times the amount from 2020—according to the FTC's Data Spotlight. Common text scams targeting businesses include fake fraud alerts redirecting victims to move money to scammer-controlled accounts, bogus toll notices designed to collect financial information, and phony job offers impersonating legitimate companies. The FTC recommends verifying unexpected texts by contacting businesses directly through official channels, avoiding clicking links or calling numbers provided in texts, and pausing before responding to urgent demands.
bbc.com
· 2025-12-08
Scammers are using fake banking apps that mimic legitimate platforms to defraud sellers in person, showing fake payment confirmations while stealing goods worth thousands of pounds. Two victims—Anthony Rudd (who lost £1,000 in power tools) and John Reddock (who lost a £2,000 gold bracelet)—were deceived when buyers appeared to transfer funds via the fraudulent apps before fleeing with merchandise. Approximately 500 such crimes have been reported to Action Fraud over three years, with these fake apps available for direct download to Android phones outside official app stores.
blog.knowbe4.com
· 2025-12-08
**Cash Bag Scamming**
Thousands of victims are currently being defrauded through "cash bag scamming," where scammers impersonate federal law enforcement (FBI, CIA, IRS, etc.) or retail companies like Amazon to convince victims their accounts are compromised by terrorists and their money is at risk. Victims are instructed to withdraw large sums of cash from their banks, avoid telling family members, and hand over their life savings to strangers, with scammers using social engineering tactics like fake official paperwork, coached bank withdrawal instructions, and isolation tactics to manipulate victims into complying.
thevibes.com
· 2025-12-08
Malaysia's online fraud cases surged 13% in the first quarter of 2025, with 12,110 reported incidents resulting in RM573.7 million (approximately USD 122 million) in losses. E-commerce scams led the increase at 19.8%, followed by telecommunications scams (5,214 cases), investment fraud (2,026 cases), and fake loan schemes (1,404 cases), with scammers increasingly using AI tools, deepfakes, and counterfeit digital identities to deceive victims. Authorities attribute the rise to increased online shopping activity during festive seasons and the proliferation of sophisticated digital deception technologies, urging the public
lelezard.com
· 2025-12-08
SeniorMatch launched Selfie Liveness Verification, becoming the first 50+ dating platform to implement AI-powered identity verification to combat romance scams and catfishing. According to FTC data, online scams targeting older adults resulted in over $3.1 billion in losses in 2024, with a SeniorMatch survey showing 87% of users over 50 are concerned about identity fraud and 72% feel more comfortable engaging with verified users. The feature uses real-time selfie capture and AI authentication to confirm user authenticity, issuing a verified badge within seconds while immediately deleting biometric data after processing.