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Criminals Use Generative Artificial Intelligence to Facilitate Financial Fraud
Criminals Use Generative Artificial Intelligence to Facilitate Financial Fraud
The FBI is warning the public that criminals exploit generative artificial intelligence (AI) to commit fraud on a larger scale which increases the believability of their schemes. Generative AI reduces the time and effort criminals must expend to deceive their targets. Generative AI takes what it has learned from examples input by a user and synthesizes something entirely new based on that information. These tools assist with content creation and can correct for human errors that might otherwise serve as warning signs of fraud. The creation or distribution of synthetic content is not inherently illegal; however, synthetic content can be used to facilitate crimes, such as fraud and extortion.1 Since it can be difficult to identify when content is AI-generated, the FBI is providing the following examples of how criminals may use generative AI in their fraud schemes to increase public recognition and scrutiny.
·ic3.gov·
Criminals Use Generative Artificial Intelligence to Facilitate Financial Fraud
Hackers are threatening to leak World-Check, a huge sanctions and financial crimes watchlist | TechCrunch
Hackers are threatening to leak World-Check, a huge sanctions and financial crimes watchlist | TechCrunch
A financially motivated criminal hacking group says it has stolen a confidential database containing millions of records that companies use for screening potential customers for links to sanctions and financial crime. The hackers, which call themselves GhostR, said they stole 5.3 million records from the World-Check screening database in March and are threatening to publish the data online.
·techcrunch.com·
Hackers are threatening to leak World-Check, a huge sanctions and financial crimes watchlist | TechCrunch