In 2026, AI has made scams faster, cheaper, and eerily convincing. Google recently outlined how a China-based operation—nicknamed “Outsider Enterprise”—blasted Android users with millions of smishing texts in days and spun up thousands of phishing sites to harvest logins and payments (Google (The Keyword)).
At the same time, voice cloning has gone mainstream. One in four Americans say they’ve received a deepfake voice call in the past year, according to an industry report (Hiya).
The financial damage is real. The FBI logged more than a million internet-crime complaints in 2025 and $20.877 billion in reported losses, including nearly $900 million tied to AI-related cases (FBI IC3 2025).
This guide shows how the newest AI scams work—fake texts, deepfakes, and phony broker alerts—plus the checks to run before you click, send, or trade.
| Point | What It Means |
|---|---|
| AI scales smishing fast | Operators can push millions of texts and thousands of phishing pages in days, so expect sudden spikes and hyper-targeted lures (Google). |
| Deepfakes are now routine | Voice clones and video impersonations pressure you to act immediately; build verification habits that don’t rely on voice alone (Hiya). |
| Investment/broker spoofs spike | Scammers mimic account alerts to bypass your caution; use your broker’s app or a saved bookmark—never the link in a message. |
| Older adults face higher losses | Victims 60+ reported $7.7B in 2025, with average losses over $38K—families should set up pre-agreed verification steps (FBI). |
| Payment rails matter | Wires, crypto, gift cards, and some instant transfers are hard to reverse; cards and some ACH have more dispute rights. |
AI tools write near‑perfect messages, translate them instantly, spin up realistic websites, and clone voices. That compresses the time between “idea” and “attack.” In May 2026 alone, Google says Outsider Enterprise sent about 2.5 million scam texts to Android users in two weeks and stood up roughly 9,000 fake sites and over a million fraudulent URLs to funnel victims to look‑alike pages (Google).
Users also flagged around 55,000 spam texts in that same two‑week window—more than two reports per minute—showcasing the sheer volume platforms are fighting (Google).
At a macro level, the FBI’s Internet Crime Complaint Center (IC3) recorded 1,008,597 complaints and $20.877 billion in losses for 2025, including 22,364 AI‑related complaints with an estimated $893.3 million in AI‑linked losses (FBI IC3 2025). The numbers confirm what consumers feel daily: more lures, more pressure, and more account takeovers.
Voice clones are now common enough that you can’t trust a familiar voice by itself. One in four U.S. consumers report receiving a deepfake voice call in the past year, and unwanted call volume has grown at a 16% annual rate since 2023 (Hiya).
Older adults remain prime targets and suffer larger losses. In 2025, more than 201,000 complaints from people 60+ totaled over $7.7 billion, with average losses above $38,000 (FBI). Build verification rituals with parents and grandparents now.
Bogus broker alerts capitalize on market volatility and “security scare” fatigue. They mimic real brands, then redirect to credential‑harvesting pages or push you into “urgent trades” on fake platforms.
| Real broker alert | Likely fake alert |
|---|---|
| Appears in the broker’s secure app inbox and matches your notification settings | Arrives only by SMS/DM/email with a link to log in |
| Sender domain matches the broker’s primary domain exactly | Uses look‑alikes (e.g., brokēr.com, bro-ker.support) |
| Never asks for full password, seed phrase, or 2FA codes | Demands OTP codes or passkeys “to verify” |
| Provides a ticket/case number you can reference in the app | Threatens account lock in minutes with no case number |
| Encourages you to call the number listed in-app | Asks you to call a number in the message itself |
Scammers push you to irreversible or hard‑to‑reverse rails. Understand what has dispute protections and what often doesn’t.
When in doubt, pause and move the request to a slower, more protected rail—or wait entirely until you verify via an official channel.
The sooner you act, the more options you typically have with disputes and account recovery.
Platforms and carriers are rolling out more pre‑delivery filtering, account‑takeover monitoring, and takedown programs. Google’s recent post details efforts to disrupt large-scale AI‑assisted operations like Outsider Enterprise by blocking messages, de‑indexing phishing pages, and sharing indicators with partners (Google).
Industry call‑authentication and spam‑filtering continue to improve, but surveys suggest scammers still reach consumers too often and that unwanted call volume remains elevated (Hiya). Expect more carrier‑level blocking, stricter sender verification for bulk messaging, and faster domain takedowns over the next year.
No. Legitimate staff won’t ask for one‑time passcodes, full passwords, seed phrases, or recovery keys. If someone asks, stop and contact the institution via its official app or known phone number.
Open the institution’s app or type its saved bookmark. Check the in‑app inbox or notification center. If there’s no matching alert inside your account, treat the message as suspicious.
Assume voice alone isn’t proof. Use a pre‑agreed challenge phrase or hang up and call back using a saved contact card. Deepfake voice reports are now widespread, so build this habit.
QR codes can hide malicious links just like short URLs. If a financial or delivery message includes a QR, ignore it and access the service from the official app or website instead.
Often, yes. Scammers lean on benefits, tech‑support, and grandparent emergencies. Losses are also higher on average for people 60+, according to the FBI. Establish slow‑down and callback rules with family.
Keep evidence (screenshots, headers) until you’ve reported to your bank and relevant authorities and confirmed next steps. Afterward, deleting reduces the risk of accidental clicks later.

