Tech giant Google has joined forces with the FBI to dismantle a Chinese cybercrime syndicate known as "Outsider Enterprise" after the group allegedly used Google's own Gemini artificial intelligence to create fraudulent websites and swindle users out of millions of dollars.
According to a report by The New York Times, Google has filed a lawsuit against the gang, accusing them of replicating official Google and YouTube interfaces to deceive unsuspecting users.
The scam revolved around a software package dubbed "phishing-for-dummies" developed by the syndicate. By leveraging the capabilities of Gemini AI, the fraudsters generated nearly 9,000 lookalike websites targeting Google platforms and various government agencies, with Google revealing it has uncovered over 1 million URLs linked to the group.
The cyber campaign also targeted Android users through a massive SMS phishing blitz. Over the past two weeks, approximately 2.5 million text messages containing links to these malicious sites were blasted to mobile devices, triggering a massive wave of spam reports from consumers.
The sheer scale of the operation forced major US telecommunications carriers including AT&T, T-Mobile and Verizon to coordinate with Google and request assistance from the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) to take down the syndicate's network infrastructure.
The case is being closely watched as one of the most significant cyber threats involving generative AI, raising concerns over how advanced AI tools can be exploited to accelerate phishing and online fraud on a massive scale.
Source: 9to5Google, TechCrunch, The New York Times, Blog Google
View original source — Bangkok Post ↗
