Deepfake lovers swindle victims out of $46M in Hong Kong AI scam

You May Be Interested In:Devs say AI crawlers dominate traffic, forcing blocks on entire countries



The police operation resulted in the seizure of computers, mobile phones, and about $25,756 in suspected proceeds and luxury watches from the syndicate’s headquarters. Police said that victims originated from multiple countries, including Hong Kong, mainland China, Taiwan, India, and Singapore.

A widening real-time deepfake problem

Realtime deepfakes have become a growing problem over the past year. In August, we covered a free app called Deep-Live-Cam that can do real-time face-swaps for video chat use, and in February, the Hong Kong office of British engineering firm Arup lost $25 million in an AI-powered scam in which the perpetrators used deepfakes of senior management during a video conference call to trick an employee into transferring money.

News of the scam also comes amid recent warnings from the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime, notes The Record in a report about the recent scam ring. The agency released a report last week highlighting tech advancements among organized crime syndicates in Asia, specifically mentioning the increasing use of deepfake technology in fraud.

The UN agency identified more than 10 deepfake software providers selling their services on Telegram to criminal groups in Southeast Asia, showing the growing accessibility of this technology for illegal purposes.

Some companies are attempting to find automated solutions to the issues presented by AI-powered crime, including Reality Defender, which creates software that attempts to detect deepfakes in real time. Some deepfake detection techniques may work at the moment, but as the fakes improve in realism and sophistication, we may be looking at an escalating arms race between those who seek to fool others and those who want to prevent deception.

share Paylaş facebook pinterest whatsapp x print

Similar Content

Green sea turtle swimming
Green sea turtle gets relief from “bubble butt” syndrome thanks to 3D printing
$2,100 mechanical keyboard has 800 holes, NYC skyscraper looks
$2,100 mechanical keyboard has 800 holes, NYC skyscraper looks
The Google Gemini logo.
Google is about to make Gemini a core part of Workspaces—with price changes
Microsoft reiterates “non-negotiable” TPM 2.0 requirement for Windows 11
Microsoft reiterates “non-negotiable” TPM 2.0 requirement for Windows 11
Gemma 3 logo Google
Google’s Gemma 3 is an open source, single-GPU AI with a 128K context window
A wrench stuck in the middle of some gears
Certain names make ChatGPT grind to a halt, and we know why
The News Spectrum | © 2024 | News