AI tools, particularly voice clones, are supercharging scams, FTC Chair Lina Khan warned.
Speaking at an AI and venture capital event on Thursday, Khan warned officials will have to be proactive to stop AI-powered fraud, Bloomberg reported.(opens in a new tab)
She noted that they are already seeing AI “turbocharge” scams, using voice clones that can copy family members in distress as an example, according to Bloomberg.
“We need to be vigilant early,” Khan said, according to Bloomberg. “If anything you need to be especially vigilant on the front-end because it’s much more difficult to solve these problems after.”
Voice clones have proven capable of fooling folks. A CNN report (opens in a new tab)noted that fake kidnapping calls demanding ransoms using the tech were becoming more common. Jennifer DeStefano told the outlet her story of getting a call demanding $1 million for their daughter before realizing the caller had used AI to copy her voice.
“The voice sounded just like Brie’s, the inflection, everything,” she told CNN.
AI voice clones have even made popular songs featuring fake versions of real artists. Even a relatively easy-to-spot fake image of the Pentagon being attacked caused a real dip in the stock market.
“As this stuff becomes more embedded in how daily decisions are being made, I think they invite and merit a lot of scrutiny,” Khan said, according to Bloomberg. “Those problems and concerns are quite urgent and I think enforcers, be it at the state level or the national level, are going to be acting.”