AI Scam Prevention Guide

AI Scams Are Getting Harder to Spot

Voice cloning, deepfake video, and AI chatbots are being weaponized against ordinary people. Learn to recognize them before you become a victim.

Learn to Spot AI Scams
$12.5B
Lost to fraud in 2023
400%
Voice cloning scams up since 2022
1 in 4
People targeted by an AI scam

Warning Signs of an AI Scam

These are the most common patterns criminals use. Recognizing them is your first line of defense.

🚨
Urgent Money Requests
Urgent requests for money — especially via gift cards or wire transfer. Legitimate organizations never demand payment this way.
🎙️
A Familiar Voice in Crisis
A voice that sounds like someone you love asking for emergency help. AI can clone a voice from seconds of audio. Always verify by calling back on a known number.
💌
Romance That Moves Too Fast
Online relationships that progress quickly but the person always has an excuse to avoid a live video call. AI-generated personas are designed to build trust fast.
📲
Guaranteed Investment Returns
Unsolicited investment opportunities promising "guaranteed" returns. No legitimate investment can guarantee returns — this is a universal fraud signal.
🖼️
Deepfake Video Calls
Video calls featuring celebrities or executives you've never contacted. Deepfake technology can simulate real-time video convincingly — look for unnatural blinking or edges.
📧
Suspicious Emails & Domains
Emails with slightly misspelled domain names or urgent account warnings. AI now writes flawless phishing emails — always check the sender domain carefully.

How to Verify Before You Act

If something feels off, slow down. These three steps can save you from becoming a victim.

Step 01
Call Back on a Known Number
Hang up and call the person or organization back using a number you find independently — from their official website or your own contacts. Never use a number provided by the suspicious caller.
Step 02
Do a Reverse Image Search
If someone sends you photos, drag them into Google Images or TinEye. AI-generated profile photos often appear on multiple scam accounts or in stock photo databases.
Step 03
Ask Something Only They'd Know
Ask a question only the real person could answer — something specific to your shared history. AI impersonators and cloned voices can't know private details you've never shared online.