“Some of the most prolific sources of scams are criminal scam centers, often fueled by forced labor and operated by organized crime primarily in Southeast Asia,” Meta stated. “We proactively detected and took down accounts before scam centers were able to operationalize them.”
Ranging from pyramid schemes to crypto investments, fraudsters use multiple platforms to manipulate targets. For instance, a scam may begin with a text message or on a dating app, then shift to social media, private messaging apps, and eventually crypto or payment platforms.
The malicious actors move victims through different platforms to “ensure that any one service has only a limited view into the entire scam, making it more challenging to detect,” the company stated.
In Meta’s statement, the company mentioned working with OpenAI to disrupt such scam efforts.
OpenAI reported activities originating in Cambodia, where scammers used ChatGPT to create text messages containing links to WhatsApp chats.
Targets who received the messages were then directed to Telegram, where they were offered money to like TikTok videos. The scammers asked the targets to deposit money into crypto accounts after enticing them with potential earnings, Meta said.
To protect users from scams, the company is introducing several new features.
This includes a group messaging feature that notifies users when added to a WhatsApp group by an unknown individual. The feature will include information on the group and allow users to exit without having to look at the chats.
Meta said it was looking for ways to caution users when they start a chat with people not in their contacts.
“We encourage you to pause, question, and verify, before responding to a suspicious or unusual message, especially if it’s from a number you don’t know promising fast money,” the company stated.
Meta has previously taken actions against scam accounts.
‘Losing Their Life’s Savings’
In an April 24 statement, the FBI said an annual report from its Internet Crime Complaint Center revealed that the agency received 859,532 complaints of suspected internet crimes in 2024, with financial losses amounting to $16 billion, a 33 percent increase from the previous year.The average loss by older adults stood at $83,000, with 7,500 complainants reporting losing more than $100,000, according to the report.
“Americans are losing their life’s savings to investment frauds as funds are being rapidly transferred to cryptocurrency accounts overseas,” Easley said.
“In this case, one victim lost his entire individual retirement account to a scam.
“We are clawing back every dollar we can, even when criminals are located abroad. We are determined to seize their illegal proceeds and return money to the victims.”
There has been a “more than four-fold increase since 2020 in reports from older adults who say they lost $10,000 or more—sometimes their entire life savings—to scammers who impersonate trusted government agencies or businesses,” the FTC stated.
The scammers convince targets to transfer money to protect it from purported threats, only to eventually steal the funds, according to the federal agency.







