Canada has access to Anthropic’s powerful Mythos AI model, minister says





For years, public anxiety about artificial intelligence has centred on the idea of machines turning against humans. The fear usually arrives dressed in metal, with robots replacing workers, outthinking governments, policing cities, […]
The post Are Humans Becoming the Avatars of AI? How Machines Are Quietly Controlling You first appeared on The Expose.
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AI has become a force multiplier for scammers. It enables them to accomplish in seconds what once took hours—at massive scale and with startling accuracy. Fraudsters have moved from a cottage-industry model to full-scale industrial operations.
Artificial intelligence has pushed scams to an unprecedented level, both in quality and quantity. Here is an overview of the most significant developments.
AI-enabled scams have increased by 1,210%, far outpacing the growth of traditional fraud (195%). Global losses tied to AI-assisted scams are estimated at $14.3 billion, and Deloitte projects that losses in the United States will rise from $12.3 billion in 2023 to $40 billion by 2027.
In France specifically, caller ID spoofing surged by 517% in 2025, and more than 500,000 victims have already received support after falling prey to AI-based scams such as voice cloning and fake financial advisers.
Generative AI is transforming phishing by creating highly personalized messages. Cybercriminals use personal data available on social media to craft emails tailored precisely to each victim.
Voice-cloning technology now requires as little as three seconds of audio to reproduce a person’s voice with remarkable realism. By mimicking the voice or appearance of executives and public officials, criminals can deceive employees into authorizing fraudulent wire transfers—as demonstrated by the $26 million stolen in Hong Kong through a deepfake scheme.
AI-powered romance scams use large language models to sustain emotionally convincing conversations at scale. These bots can maintain dozens of simultaneous “relationships,” adapting their tone and personality to each target.
In January 2025, authorities dismantled a large-scale scam in which fraudsters used AI avatars to conduct fake job interviews, collecting sensitive personal information and confidential documents. Recruiting platforms report that identity-theft attempts involving AI-generated job postings have increased fivefold.
Check Point’s “Truman Show” operation uncovered a scheme involving 90 AI-generated “experts” deployed in controlled messaging groups to persuade victims to invest in fraudulent crypto platforms. According to Chainalysis, cryptocurrency scams caused $14 billion in losses in 2025, and AI-driven scams proved 4.5 times more profitable than conventional fraud.
AI-based scams remove many of the human limitations that once made social engineering easier to spot and slower to execute. There are no spelling mistakes, no foreign accents, and no obvious visual inconsistencies. People correctly identify AI-generated voices only about 60% of the time.
A few essential precautions:
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