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77% of People Who Engage With an AI Scam Call End Up Losing Money

77% of People Who Engage With an AI Scam Call End Up Losing Money

In 2026, deepfakes already account for 11% of all global fraud, and 77% of people who engage with an AI scammer on a phone call end up losing money, Sumsub reports.

How it technically works: scammers collect voice samples of a victim or a public figure from social media, webinars, or recorded calls, then use voice-synthesis tools to create a convincing clone — calling as a "boss," a "relative," or a well-known crypto investor asking for an urgent transfer.

Why crypto specifically is such a frequent target: a crypto transfer is irreversible, and AI-enabled scams in the crypto space are already 4.5 times more profitable than traditional fraud — crypto scam losses alone topped $14 billion in 2025, per a UN warning about a global wave of organized fraud.

What this means in practice: if a call sounds like a familiar voice but urgently and secretly asks for a crypto transfer, verify the person's identity through a separate channel before acting. Fewer than 5% of funds stolen this way are ever recovered.

This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.

Mike Robinson

Author

Mike Robinson

News feed editor

I'm constantly writing about crypto, Bitcoin, and altcoins. I cover a variety of topics related to the virtual currency market.

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