84 points

Are we sure it’s AI?

I’ve heard of this scam happening maybe a decade ago with my extended family. The voice was a real person overseas with a lot of exp tricking grandparents. Scammers only had basic information.

They act as a freaked out kid and the victim gets roped in. They scam for thousands of dollars each time, even succeeding a few times a day would net a big profit. Also cell connections are low fidelity, I bet that aids their ability to trick the victim.

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20 points

Yeah this happened to my grandparents, they just say “I sound like shit because I’ve been crying”

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2 points

A former colleague’s parents were scammed; their “kid” (the scammer) had a “broken nose”.

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14 points

Same. Years ago my grandfather received a call from a guy claiming to be my younger, male cousin saying he was in jail for something and needed bail. Luckily (?), my grandfather was an asshole and told him to call his mother.

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7 points

Yeah, my dad called me one day asking if my brother was out if the country because our grandma got a call saying he was kidnapped in Mexico and she needed to put up money for his release.

It’s wild.

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55 points

Not sure I buy this tbh.

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18 points

I don’t know, the “Spanish prisoner” is a scam that seems to be reinvented every few years every time we see a little bit of a change in technology. It wouldn’t take much to fake a person’s voice with a trained model, especially if that person has an online profile open to the public where they post content in their own voice.

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3 points

The Spanish Prisoner is also an excellent David Mamet film.

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5 points

A: The Spanish Prisoner is also an excellent…

B: …excellent

A: David… David Mamet.

B: What I’m saying is, when it comes to excellent films

A: That’s what I’m saying

B: (simultaneously) David Mamet

A: (simultaneously) Mamet

B: it’s excellent

A: hm. The best.

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3 points

The plot of the movie is very similar to the basic setup of a 419 scam, which was given the nickname “the Spanish prisoner”

I’m going to go ahead and check that out tonight. Looks like it has a great cast.

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13 points

Yeah, it has some sus vibes. I’m usually far too trusting, but here even my bullshit detectors rang

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14 points

You know that old adage “Never attribute to malice that which can be easily explained by stupidity”?

We need a new one along the lines of “Never attribute to truth that which can be easily explained by attention-starved teenagers”

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I could easily conceive some tricks to get clips of a person’s voice without them realizing. I’d write them out but… that would be stupid of me. Humans have more vulnerabilities than computers.

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1 point

Yeah, unless this person runs a YouTube or podcast it seems implausible. What would you train a random AI on for the normal person?

I could see a situation where you hack a phone, get the contacts and call history, pick the 1st or 2nd most dialed number, have a bot call that person to get samples, then go back to the original phone and try this… I mean, eventually you’d get a hit?

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0 points
Deleted by creator
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43 points

Where did they get their voice?

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64 points

You can train AI with just a single voice clip. You can do this on your desktop. Microsoft doesn’t need to sell shit, you put that clip on tiktok yourself.

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12 points

You don’t even need to upload anything. They can call you, have a short convo and then just say “oh sorry wrong number” or something. You’d never know.

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2 points

Yet another reason to screen your calls. I never pick up unless I know the number.

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2 points
*

Yup. You need like 5 to 15 seconds of talking, that’s it. I’ve done this myself to confirm it works actually quite well with.

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8 points

Well they said they dont share their voice anywhere, if thats true it would be concerning. I for one just dont use any centralized unencrypted services that could scrape my voice but i would assume most people think that if they dont publish anything, they are safe…

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5 points

You don’t talk to anyone on the phone through a pbx? Never call your bank? Your doctor? Your credit card company? Any of your insurance company? Even on private systems all of those calls are recorded for legal reasons. And all of them will eventually be compromised.

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8 points

Really? How?

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52 points

The ‘old’ way of faking someone’s voice like you saw in 90s spy movies was to get enough sample data to capture each possible speech sound someone could make, such that those sounds can be combined to form all possible words.

With AI training you only need enough data to know what someone sounds like ‘in general’ to extrapolate a reasonable model.

One possible source of voice data is spam-calls.

You get a call, say “Hello?” And then someone launches into trying to sell you insurance or some rubbish, you say “Sorry I’m not interested, take me off your list please. Okay, bye” and hang up.

And that is already enough data to replicate your voice.

When scammers make the call using your fake voice, they usually use a crappy quality line, or background noise, or other techniques to cover up any imperfections in the voice replica. And of course they make it really emotional, urgent and high-stakes to override your family member’s logical thinking.

Educating your family to be prepared for this stuff is really important.

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-1 points

Yeah I’m gonna go ahead and not give that knowledge out.

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39 points

When I was a kid, my parents had “the talk” with me. It was about sex. Now I’m older and my parents are too. I have to have “the talk” with them. It’s about scams.

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12 points

My uncle got divorced a few years back and it nearly crushed him. He we a ridiculously handsome young and successful man, so women chased him. At any point when he was younger he had at least a handful of women actively pursuing him. Now he was older and divorced. Those women were long gone, all having married and carried on with their lives. He didn’t expect to struggle with dating like he did and that made the whole thing even harder.

I set him up on all of the big dating sites. I didn’t know how bad it was, I’d never used them.

He was talking to at least 10 scammers a day, probably more.

He’s kind of a miser so no one was going to get any of his money, but his hobbies showed his wealth and oh boy did they try.

It was so bad that he gave up on the dating sites entirely. He’s had a few girlfriends since then but he only met one person in over a year on the dating sites.

It blows my mind just how many people are out there making a living scamming people.

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7 points

The sad thing is that, in the current era, virtually all dating sites are scams riddled with bots and have been for over a decade. Their goal is to make money not produce matches.

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8 points

He really struggled with it.

I’d do a reverse image search and find the actual person, he’d thank me and move on. Some of them got in his head. One even faked a Skype call with a video of a beautiful woman and somehow scouted his Facebook profile to really dive deep into his personality. The video was like 13 pixels and she’d say, “I’m sorry, I live way out in the wilderness and we have bad satellite internet.”

He said, “She’s too good to be true. No one is this agreeable.” I told him to ask her to make a specific gesture because of all of scammers. He did, he asked her to hold her hands above her head in the shape of a triangle. She refused, said something like, “I can’t believe you don’t trust me. That breaks my heart. You know me.” She stopped talking to him, a couple weeks later she messaged, “I’m so sorry, my mom is in the hospital and I have no money to eat. I wouldn’t ask you but I have been alone so long you’re all I know.” He told her if it was that desperate she could prove who she is and he’d help. Nope. Nothing. Radio silence. That one really hurt him. Whoever it was played the scam game real good.

You might not believe this, but I have a cousin (my mom’s first cousin actually) who fell in love with her scammer. He conned her out of thousands of dollars, turned out to be from Nigeria when he said he was from somewhere else. About 6 months in he said, “Listen. I am not who I have said I am. My real name is John, I am truly in love with you. I know you and I want you to really know me.”

She was in her 50s, he was in his 30s. She was not an attractive woman. She was short, fat, walked with a limp and was born with physical deformities (her nickname to us kids was “old bat”, playfully of course). He wasn’t attractive either, but still. 20 years younger, from another country, had, I don’t know, scammed her. My mom tried her best to stop it, but she flew to Nigeria and married the dude. She stayed over there a few months and then he flew back with her. He stayed with her about 4 years I guess, and he ran around with any woman who would have him. He finally drained her money and rolled out.

The last thing I heard about him, he was arrested for breaking into the grocery store he worked at and robbing the safe.

It is crazy to me just how much money can motivate people to do absurd and crazy things. I can’t relate at all. I’ve been broke as shit and all I had to do was sell a few things to get back on track and I couldn’t motivate myself to even do that. Money just doesn’t mean enough to me to go to any trouble to get it haha.

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1 point

If you’re not careful, the subject of both those “talks” will fuck you raw

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34 points

Uh there’s zero chance these big techs are selling voices like this. Also, this sounds very targeted and planned, so there must be more context to this. Also, why the hell are they on bluesky?

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They’re on BlueSky because there are more people there that would actually believe this total load of bullshit. Plenty of scams that will claim to be vague family member (no names; just like “son” or “daughter,” “aunt” or “uncle”) but highly unlikely they’re getting an AI to mimic your voice. Just like vagueness of the family member they claim to be, the voices used may coincidentally sound similar.

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5 points

Because its probably the best twitter alternative

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5 points

Not even close to Mastodon

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1 point

Bluesky is more usable than Mastodon purely because it doesn’t use a decentralized model. Sure it defeats the purpose, but on the plus side it removes some serious inconveniences that the true fediverse comes with, for example i’ve never been on Bluesky and found myself unable to upvote someone because i’ve accidentally left my instance.

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4 points

I wish I were this naive

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2 points

Oh they totally are. Maybe not this directly, but there is an awful depth to the data market. One company may be selling to the next and the next and you end up with companies just buying all the data they can to sell police surveillance software running off of fucking Candy Crush telemetry.

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