AI Scams Targeting Seniors
Criminals are now using artificial intelligence to create fake voices, fake videos, and fake messages that are nearly impossible to tell apart from the real thing. Here's what you need to know to stay safe.
The Golden Rule β More Important Than Ever
If you receive an unexpected call, text, or video β even from someone who looks or sounds like a family member β Stop. Hang up. Call them back on their real number. AI can now fake any voice or face. When in doubt, always verify through a number you already know.
The 5 Most Common AI Scams Right Now
Fake Voice Calls ("Grandparent Scam 2.0")
Scammers use AI to clone a grandchild's voice from social media. They call pretending to be in an emergency β arrested, in a car accident β and beg for money immediately. The voice sounds completely real.
Most CommonDeepfake Video Calls
AI generates a realistic moving video of a family member or authority figure during a live video call. They ask you to confirm personal information or send money urgently.
Growing FastAI Chatbot Romance Scams
Scammers use AI chatbots to hold long, warm conversations for weeks or months, building a relationship β then eventually ask for money for a "crisis." There is no real person on the other end.
Watch OutAI-Written Phishing Emails
Old scam emails had spelling mistakes that made them easy to spot. AI now writes perfect, convincing emails that look exactly like they're from your bank, Medicare, or the IRS β complete with your name and details.
Very ConvincingFake AI Tech Support
A pop-up or call claims "AI has detected a virus on your computer." They ask to remote-access your device to "fix" it β then steal passwords, photos, and financial information while you watch.
Tech SupportWarning Signs of an AI Scam
- β οΈ Someone creates a sense of extreme urgency β "Act NOW or something terrible will happen"
- β οΈ They ask for payment in gift cards, wire transfer, cryptocurrency, or Zelle
- β οΈ A caller sounds like your grandchild or family member but asks you NOT to tell anyone else
- β οΈ A video call has slightly blurry or unnatural-looking edges around the face
- β οΈ The email has your name and some personal details but asks you to "verify" account information
- β οΈ Someone claims to be from Medicare, Social Security, or the IRS and demands immediate action
- β οΈ A new online "friend" or "romantic interest" has never agreed to meet in person or video call
- β οΈ A tech support pop-up appears with a phone number to call β real tech companies don't do this
What This Looks Like
The Scenario
Margaret, 72, gets a phone call. It's her grandson Tyler's voice β crying, panicked. He says he was in a car accident, hurt someone, and is in jail. He begs her not to tell his parents and to wire $4,500 for bail immediately. A "lawyer" gets on the line to confirm the story. The voice sounds exactly like Tyler.
What Actually Happened
Scammers found Tyler's Instagram videos, used AI to clone his voice in minutes, and created the entire scenario. Tyler was perfectly fine at home.
β What to Do
Hang up immediately. Call Tyler directly on the number already saved in your phone. Never send money based on an unexpected call, no matter how real the voice sounds.
π‘οΈ How to Protect Yourself β Step by Step
1. Create a Family "Safe Word"
Agree on a secret word with your family that only you would know. If someone calls claiming to be a family member in trouble, ask for the safe word. A scammer won't know it.
2. Always Call Back on a Trusted Number
If you receive any urgent call β even from a voice you recognize β hang up and call them back using the number already saved in your phone contacts. Do not call back the number that called you.
3. Never Send Money Urgently
Legitimate emergencies have real solutions that don't require gift cards, wire transfers, or cryptocurrency. If someone insists on these payment methods, it is always a scam β no exceptions.
4. Be Suspicious of Perfect Emails
AI can now write flawless, convincing emails. Do not trust an email just because it looks professional and has no spelling errors. Always go directly to your bank's official website instead of clicking email links.
5. Limit What You Share on Social Media
Scammers collect voice samples and photos from Facebook, YouTube, and Instagram to create AI fakes. Keep your profiles set to "Friends Only" and limit public posts that include your voice or face.
6. Tell Someone Before Acting
Scammers rely on secrecy. Before sending any money or sharing any personal information β especially if someone asks you to keep it quiet β tell a trusted family member or friend first.
For Family Members β Helping Your Parent Stay Protected
- β Set up a family "safe word" together today β this is the single best defense against voice cloning scams
- β Make sure your contact is saved in their phone so they can easily call you back
- β Set their Facebook and Instagram profiles to "Friends Only" to reduce data scammers can harvest
- β Tell them: "If anyone ever asks you to keep something secret from us, that's always a scam"
- β Walk through one real scam example together so they can recognize the pattern
- β Add yourself as an emergency contact and encourage them to call you before sending any money
- β Bookmark this page and the FTC scam reporting site: reportfraud.ftc.gov
When Something Feels Wrongβ¦
NEVER Do This
Send gift cards, wire money, or share account numbers based on an unexpected call or email β no matter who it sounds like.
Got a Suspicious Call?
Hang up immediately. Don't press buttons or answer questions. Call your family member directly on their saved number.
Already Sent Money?
Call your bank immediately, then report it to the FTC at reportfraud.ftc.gov. Acting fast can sometimes stop or reverse a transfer.
Not Sure If It's Real?
Pause, hang up, and check with a family member before doing anything. Real emergencies can wait 5 minutes. Scams cannot.