Fraud goes door-to-door.
Episode description
This week, hosts of N2K CyberWire Maria Varmazis and Dave Bittner alongside Joe Carrigan are discussing the latest in social engineering scams, phishing schemes, and criminal exploits that are making headlines. We start with some follow-up on an editorial examining whether AI could signal the beginning of the end for traditional social engineering, as attackers increasingly target AI systems instead of people. Dave's got the story on an FBI warning that crypto scammers are using cash couriers to collect money from victims and bypass banking safeguards. Maria's got the story on AI-powered impersonators posing as members of the rock band Sons of Legion to scam fans through fake relationships and fraudulent requests for money. Joe's got two stories: one on HSBC Australia facing a proposed $246 million penalty over alleged scam protection failures, and another on two Michigan gold scam busts that prevented victims from losing hundreds of thousands of dollars. Our catch of the day is a reflection on a past interaction where the author initially held out hope someone might reappear, but ultimately accepts they’re gone and shares the story in hindsight, including their own strongly emotional reaction at the time.
Resources and links to stories:
- The Beginning of the End of Social Engineering
- FBI Warns Courier Cash Pickups Are Driving Crypto Scams
- A Rock Band Went Viral. Then AI Scammers Moved In
- HSBC's Australia unit to pay $24.6 million fine over scam protection failures, court rules
- A Couple Was Told To Turn $250,000 Into Gold. Police Stopped The Courier Scam
- Video: Deputies nab suspect in attempted $700,000 gold coin scam
- Eric - failed bait because I'm such a b**ch - part 1
Have a Catch of the Day you'd like to share? Email it to us at hackinghumans@n2k.com.
