Latest AI and deepfake scam messages
Current AI-enabled scam patterns - voice-clone family emergencies, deepfake video calls, and CEO wire-transfer impersonation.
These are current scam-message patterns our team has reviewed and sanitised - not a live feed. Last updates are shown on each page. We never publish live scam links or personal data.
- AI voice family emergency call Likely scam
Scammers clone a relative's voice with AI to demand urgent money. Learn how to verify, set a family safe word, and what to do if you paid.
- fake AI voice family emergency message Likely scam
Fake ai voice family emergency message: why it's a scam, the warning signs, and what to do if you clicked, gave access, shared a password, or scanned a code.
- fake deepfake video call scam Likely scam
Fake deepfake video call scam: why it's a scam, the warning signs, and what to do if you clicked, gave access, shared a password, or scanned a code.
- deepfake CEO wire transfer message Likely scam
Deepfake ceo wire transfer message: why it's a scam, the warning signs, and what to do if you clicked, gave access, shared a password, or scanned a code.
- fake tech support popup Likely scam
Fake tech support popup: why it's a scam, the warning signs, and what to do if you clicked, gave access, shared a password, or scanned a code.
- remote access AnyDesk scam message Likely scam
Remote access anydesk scam message: why it's a scam, the warning signs, and what to do if you clicked, gave access, shared a password, or scanned a code.
- browser notification virus scam Likely scam
Browser notification virus scam: why it's a scam, the warning signs, and what to do if you clicked, gave access, shared a password, or scanned a code.
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What this hub tracks
Recently reviewed AI-enabled scam patterns: cloned-voice 'emergencies', deepfake video calls, and more convincing phishing.
Recently documented patterns
- Cloned-voice calls faking a relative's emergency
- Deepfake video calls impersonating officials or executives
- Highly polished phishing with fewer language mistakes
- 'Digital arrest' video-call pressure
Common red flags
- Unexpected contact creating urgency, fear, or excitement
- Requests for codes, passwords, payment, or personal details
- Links or attachments you did not expect
- A sender, number, or domain that doesn't match the real organisation
What to do
- Stop and verify through official channels you find yourself.
- Don't click links or share codes, passwords, or card details.
- If money moved, contact your bank or provider immediately and report it.
How to verify safely
- Open the official app or type the address yourself - don't tap links in the message.
- Call the organisation on a number you look up independently.
- Check a suspicious message with the free checker before acting.
Related emergency guides
Related scam-type hubs
Sources
Last reviewed: 2026-06-05. These are recently documented, reviewed patterns - not a real-time feed.
We don't claim to detect every scam or guarantee recovery. Always verify through official channels and report to your local authority.