Deepfake scams are increasingly being used to target companies. And, unfortunately, they’re getting more sophisticated all the time. As we work to protect our organizations from all kinds of fraud, I can’t over-emphasize the importance of the human element to these efforts. I recently read about a scammer who tried to impersonate the CEO at Ferrari The scammer used WhatsApp to carry out a live conversation imitating the CEO’s voice, complete with his photo and company logo. Thankfully, the executive who received the call noticed the CEO’s request sounded unusual. The exec observed that the call came from a different number. He also noticed some slight discrepancies in the voice. He decided to ask the caller to identify himself by naming the book the CEO recently recommended he read, and the scammer hung up. It’s this kind of vigilance that’s needed to stop these attacks. As AI-powered #deepfakes become harder to distinguish from reality, we all need to be constantly on guard—and that means having the right training in place so employees know what to look for. You can learn about this particular incident here. #AI #Cybersecurity #Deepfake
That is an instructive and frightening account !
منظور رائع.Your view 100 % correct
A great post François Locoh-Donou love this
IT Executive Advisory & Fractional CIO/CISO | Driving enterprise growth & business performance via scalable Information Technology
3wThanks for raising awareness on this. Wrote about this trend here too: https://www.vertiance.com/blog/beware-of-ai-supercharged-phishing/