

How AI is reshaping fraud—and the new scams you must prepare for
₹99 here, ₹249 there, ₹1,200 occasionally. These small unauthorized debits, fake subscription renewals, or wrong UPI transfers don’t make headlines, but they quietly erode a family’s monthly surplus.AI has amplified this problem. Scammers no longer rely on clumsy phishing messages.
Today’s frauds are hyper-personal, using information already leaked about you—your family names, your past purchases, your PAN, even your voice—to craft scams that feel authentic.Let’s break down the most dangerous and believable scams you’re likely to face going forward, regardless of how tech-savvy you think you are.Voice-cloning “emergency” scams: This is the fraud that hits parents the hardest. In seconds, AI tools can clone your child’s or spouse’s voice using old social-media videos or forwarded audio. The call usually comes at an odd time with the same request: “Please send money right now, something unplanned came up.” It feels real because it sounds real.
Losses often range from ₹5,000 to ₹50,000 before the family realizes the call is fraudulent.UPI overlay fraud: You receive a perfectly designed payment screen that looks like your electricity bill or direct-to-home (DTH) service recharge. The colours, fonts, even the logo, everything matches, just that your payment is heading to the fraudster, not the utility. This is one of the fastest-growing scams across tier-I and tier-II cities.AI-powered investment traps: AI-generated dashboards now mimic broker apps, showing fake P&L statements, historical charts, and “guaranteed” weekly returns.
You believe you’re investing in an innovative trading algorithm. You’re depositing money into a wallet controlled by a scammer. Even seasoned retail traders are falling for these because the
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