A Oneindia Venture

How AI-Powered Financial Frauds Are Targeting Seniors — Especially Via Joint Accounts?

As AI is advancing at a breakneck speed, its capabilities are outpacing our ability to keep up. The senior citizens are particularly susceptible to AI-powered financial fraud because they are often less tech-savvy and unfamiliar with potential scams. They become easier targets than the average Joe when cyber criminals perpetrate a phishing attack or misuse digital identity.

How AI-Powered Financial Frauds Are Targeting Seniors Via Joint Accounts?

Threats emerging from Generative AI like deep fake apps are compounding these vulnerabilities. The reliability of video KYC is under threat due to sophisticated deepfake tools that are cheap and often free. Identity impersonation services are at your fingertips in Telegram enabling crooks to defraud innocent people. Nudifying bots have made young women insecure about posting anything online for fear of AI edits and misuse," as per Ankush Tiwari, CEO of pi-labs.

We need protection against these threats, and the awareness campaigns should reach the last mile, especially the senior citizens who are easily tricked by social engineering tactics. Without adequate safety measures, their retirement funds are just one click away from theft. Their investments are one deepfake call away from liquidation. The threat isn't limited to senior citizens. The FS-ISAC report states that "6 out of 10 executives noted that their firms have no protocols regarding deepfake risks".

"Regulators should devise additional security protocols and safety guidelines for banks and financial institutions to ensure the financial safety of senior citizens. The government policies and law enforcement agencies should aggressively crack down on organized digital crimes to minimize the risks," Ankush Tiwari further added.

Seniors have lived the better parts of their lives in the real world, where trust was built through face-to-face interactions and personal connections. Now, scammers are using AI to fake voices, faces, documents, and websites to take advantage of that trust.

"Banks and tech companies need to lead the solution. They should use AI to stop AI-powered fraud. Until that happens, seniors should follow one simple rule: if someone calls and urgently asks for money or personal information, hang up. Then call back the person using a phone number you know and trust. A real bank or family member will never rush or pressure you into making immediate decisions," commented Kaushal Bheda, Director-Govtech, Pelorus Technologies.

Fraudsters target seniors because they know older adults are more likely to believe someone who says they are from the bank or a family member. That is how things worked when they grew up. Now we are expecting seniors to suddenly become cybersecurity experts? That is not realistic, and the rise in the sheer number of scams against older adults proves it.

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