FB pixel

$35M stolen in voice clone as deepfake tech availability increases

$35M stolen in voice clone as deepfake tech availability increases
 

A previously unreported incident in which $35 million was stolen in 2020 when fraudsters used voice cloning technology to trick a banker in the UAE into transferring the money into their own account has been revealed by Forbes. The criminals used voice altering technology to pretend to be a company director who needed the money transferring for an acquisition. Tools and techniques for carrying out such attacks are being shared on the dark web, suggesting an increasing threat, says a biometrics firm.

It appears that the fraudsters mounted an elaborate attack involving emails, but it was the voice deepfake which may have ultimately convinced the banker to make the transfer, leading to the second known such attack – and for a far greater sum of money – after $243,000 was defrauded in the UK in March 2019. However, details of the case only emerged after Forbes discovered court documents generated when the UAE court sought help from American investigators to trace $400,000 of the stolen funds that went to bank accounts in the U.S. held at Centennial Bank.

“The absence of face-to-face contact under lockdown has made it easier than ever for fraudsters to get past standard identity checks. We’re now seeing an uptick in deepfake tech and service offerings across the dark web, where users are sharing illicit software, best practices and how-to guides,” Stephen Ritter, CTO at Mitek, and an expert on the technologies behind and challenges posed by deepfakes told Biometric Update.

“All of this demonstrates a concerted effort across the cybercrime sphere to sharpen deepfake tools, which in turn points towards the first signs of a new wave of impending fraud.”

This increasing activity around voice shaping and deepfakes has been known to experts for some time, but the UAE heist news came earlier than many predicted. Tools to combat such frauds are also under constant development by firms such as Mitek.

“Voice offers a powerful and convenient form of biometrics that will have a critical role to play in improving anti-fraud defenses. Where one form of biometrics, such as facial or thumbprint readers, presents a solid defense against would-be hackers, two offers a lot more protection, which leads to lower fraud rates,” said Ritter, whose company recently acquired voice and face biometrics tech provider ID R&D to bolster its capabilities.

The ease of collecting staff biometrics can also be used as part of a firm’s defenses, explains Ritter: “In our experience, the combination of both voice and face biometrics makes the verification process almost impenetrable by fraudsters, offering four layers of protection – liveness and recognition of both face and voice. Not only that, but voice biometrics can be collected from our devices easily and passively – meaning it isn’t hard to develop a robust database of employee or consumer voice biometrics to better prevent fraud.”

Article Topics

 |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   | 

Latest Biometrics News

 

California nears vote on social media age checks amid privacy clash

Debate surrounding California’s latest age assurance law is seeing rhetoric amp up on both sides of the issue, with lawmakers…

 

UNICEF unveils guide for design of DPI systems that work better for children

Sometimes, countries design digital public infrastructure (DPI) systems that either harm or totally exclude children from enjoying some of their…

 

Turks and Caicos national digital ID to be ready in 2027: Govt

The Turks and Caicos Islands have announced new investments in its long-awaited digital ID program, along with details of the…

 

Executive hires across NEC, ID.me, RealSense, Women in ID signal growth push

A series of senior leadership moves across the digital identity, biometrics and government technology sectors this week signal continued momentum…

 

Fingerprint Cards’ transformation lifts 2025 results

Fingerprint Cards completed its final full year before its planned merger with Precise Biometrics with revenue up, costs down and…

 

Sri Lanka’s local governments go digital

The Ministry of Public Administration, Provincial Councils, and Local Government in Sri Lanka has started a program aimed at digitalizing…

Comments

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Biometric Market Analysis and Buyer's Guides

Most Viewed This Week

Featured Company

Biometrics Insight, Opinion

Digital ID In-Depth

Biometrics White Papers

Biometrics Events