The Future of the Con Is Here, It's Just Not Evenly Distributed
4 hours ago
- #LLM
- #Scams
- #Security
- Scammers use a sophisticated job interview scam to steal identities by tricking victims into logging into a fake NDA signing platform, allowing them to gain access to accounts and personal information.
- Large Language Models (LLMs) enable personalized, scalable scams by automating tasks like research, communication, deepfaking, and monitoring, filling the gap between cheap spray-and-pray scams and expensive targeted attacks.
- Traditional security heuristics are becoming ineffective as LLMs can cheaply fake signals like personalized communication, voice cloning, and video calls, undermining cost and capability assumptions.
- Institutions like banks rely on heuristics that differentiate between stolen credentials and voluntary transfers, but LLM-driven scams blur these lines, necessitating new protective measures.
- To adapt, individuals should develop new heuristics, such as detecting scam patterns, using multi-channel verification, spoken passwords, and hardware 2FA, while institutions may need to evolve fraud protections in an arms race with scammers.