A surge in AI-powered cons is hitting victims across the globe, prompting Google to issue a new advisory flagging how criminals are weaponizing software to trick users at scale.
In a new blog post, Google highlights a rapid rise in scams driven by transnational crime groups and automated social-engineering tools, noting that AI is now materially amplifying fraud tactics across the internet.
The firm notes that fraud rings impersonate legitimate employers by cloning career pages, building fake recruiter profiles and even staging phony video interviews to harvest bank details and identity documents. These campaigns push victims to pay upfront “registration” or “processing” fees or to download trojanized interview software.
Another form of fraud involves negative-review extortion. It starts with coordinated “review-bombing” designed to overwhelm moderation systems. Attackers then contact the merchant off-platform and threaten to leave the harmful reviews or escalate the attack unless paid.
In AI-product impersonation scams, criminals build convincing lookalike apps, browser extensions and phishing sites promising “free” or “exclusive” access to popular tools. They push installs through cloaked malvertising and hijacked social accounts with payloads that steal credentials or install malware. Google warns these schemes often mimic trusted brands closely and use generative AI to polish fake websites and documents that lend the trap credibility.
Malicious VPN apps and extensions are distributed as fake privacy tools that, once installed, deliver info-stealers, RATs and banking trojans. Attackers sideload these apps via deceptive ads or unverified download links, or they publish lookalike packages in third-party stores.
Fraud-recovery scams target people already victimized, promising to reclaim lost funds for an upfront fee. Perpetrators pose as investigators, law firms or recovery services and use high-quality fake sites and AI-generated documents to convince desperate victims to pay — then disappear.
Lastly, seasonal holiday scams spike during major shopping periods, with fake storefronts, hijacked brand terms and deceptive ads pushing “too good to be true” deals. Attackers impersonate delivery services and retailers through phishing and smishing campaigns, demanding fake redelivery fees or promoting counterfeit prizes.
Google closes by noting that AI is now actively boosting scam scale and sophistication, as criminals automate impersonation, malware delivery and outreach campaigns.
“As the threat landscape evolves, our teams observe that scammers are increasingly misusing AI tools to efficiently scale and enhance their schemes.”
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