I’ve spent my entire career telling people that technology is a tool to help you do more. Unfortunately, the bad guys have been using that same tool to build something truly unsettling: the deepfake.
We’ve officially entered an era where you can't necessarily trust your eyes or ears during a business call. It isn’t just for making funny movie parodies anymore; it’s being weaponized to bypass your security and drain your bank accounts.
A deepfake is a piece of media—an image, audio clip, or video—that has been digitally altered or created from scratch using artificial intelligence to misrepresent someone. While the technology involves complex neural networks, the result is straightforward: it makes a lie look like the absolute truth.
It’s easy to think this is future tech that won't hit your office for years. However, these attacks are happening right now. Here are three concrete examples of how a scammer might use this against you:
Imagine your office manager gets a phone call. It sounds exactly like you. The cadence, the tone, even the way you clear your throat, is perfect. You tell them that you’re in a meeting and forgot to authorize an urgent wire transfer for a new vendor. They recognize your voice, so they skip the usual verification steps and send the money. The trouble is, you never placed that call, or said any of that.
This isn't theory; scammers only need about 30 seconds of your voice—easily pulled from a YouTube video or a LinkedIn clip—to clone it perfectly.
This is one of the most sophisticated moves I’ve seen.
A group of employees joins a scheduled video call. They see their CFO on the screen. The CFO looks a bit grainy; maybe the lighting is off, but they explain they are in a hotel with bad Wi-Fi. They instruct the team to move funds for a secret acquisition. Since the team sees the boss (or, more accurately, “the boss”), they follow orders.
A scammer could create a video of you saying something offensive or admitting to illegal business practices, then threaten to release it unless you pay a ransom. Even if you can eventually prove it’s fake, the immediate damage to your reputation and your brand's trust can be devastating. It might be more negative attention than you can overcome.
Data is critical to your business, but trust is the foundation it sits on. If your staff can’t trust that the person on the other end of the phone or screen is who they say they are, your entire workflow grinds to a halt.
The danger here isn't just the loss of money—though a single fraudulent wire transfer can easily reach six figures—it's the psychological toll on your team. Being a victim of a scam isn't your fault, but it can leave an employee feeling compromised and hesitant to make future decisions.
You don't need to be a computer scientist to protect your business. You just need to update your human operating system.
Obviously technology is moving really fast. By the end of this year, these fakes will be even more seamless. If you want to discuss how to harden your business against sophisticated threats, we are here to help.
If you’re worried about your current security posture or want to run a training session for your staff on modern scams, give us a call at 631-905-9617. We'd love to help you stay one step ahead of the bad guys.
About the author
Suffolk Computer Consultants has been serving the Speonk area since 2013, providing IT Support such as technical helpdesk support, computer support, and consulting to small and medium-sized businesses.
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