Close Menu

    Stay Ahead with Exclusive Updates!

    Enter your email below and be the first to know what’s happening in the ever-evolving world of technology!

    What's Hot

    Microsoft Just Ended OpenAI’s Cloud Exclusivity. AWS Is Already Moving In and the Consequences for the AI Market Are Enormous

    May 22, 2026

    Startup Funding Is Falling in 2026 Unless You Have AI at the Core. Here Is What That Means for Every Founder Who Does Not

    May 22, 2026

    A Cybersecurity Firm Just Had Its Own Source Code Stolen. Trellix’s Breach Is the Most Embarrassing Kind and the Most Instructive One.

    May 22, 2026
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Facebook X (Twitter)
    PhronewsPhronews
    • Home
    • Big Tech & Startups

      Microsoft Just Ended OpenAI’s Cloud Exclusivity. AWS Is Already Moving In and the Consequences for the AI Market Are Enormous

      May 22, 2026

      Startup Funding Is Falling in 2026 Unless You Have AI at the Core. Here Is What That Means for Every Founder Who Does Not

      May 22, 2026

      OpenAI Just Built a $4 Billion Company Designed to Live Inside Your Business Workflows. The Race to Own Enterprise AI Just Entered a New Phase.

      May 20, 2026

      Meta Is Building Two AI Products at Once – Hatch, a General-Purpose Agent, and a Shopping Tool for Instagram.

      May 20, 2026

      Anthropic Just Committed $100 Billion to Amazon. Here Is What That Number Tells You About Who Is Winning the AI Arms Race.

      May 17, 2026
    • Crypto

      Market Collapse: What Happened to NFTs?

      April 23, 2026

      Quantum Computing Advances Force Coinbase and Institutional Custodians to Rethink Crypto Security

      March 8, 2026

      AI Assisted Hacking Groups Target Crypto Firms With Multi-Layered Social Engineering

      February 18, 2026

      Global Crypto Regulations Expand as 2026 Begins With New Data Collection Frameworks and National Laws

      January 16, 2026

      Coinbase Bets on Stablecoin and On-Chain Growth as Key Market Drivers in 2026 Strategy

      January 10, 2026
    • Gadgets & Smart Tech
      Featured

      Foldable Phones Are No Longer a Gimmick — The Motorola Razr 2026 Is the Latest Sign That Foldables Are Going Mainstream

      By fariehanMay 3, 2026
      Recent

      Foldable Phones Are No Longer a Gimmick — The Motorola Razr 2026 Is the Latest Sign That Foldables Are Going Mainstream

      May 3, 2026

      Meta Raises Quest VR Headset Prices as Component Costs Rise

      May 1, 2026

      Robotics Showcase: China Uses a Half-Marathon to Signal Progress in Humanoid Tech

      April 27, 2026
    • Cybersecurity & Online Safety

      A Cybersecurity Firm Just Had Its Own Source Code Stolen. Trellix’s Breach Is the Most Embarrassing Kind and the Most Instructive One.

      May 22, 2026

      Hackers Built a Zero-Day Exploit Using AI and Almost Got Away With It. Google Caught It in Time. Next Time May Be Different.

      May 19, 2026

      275 Million Students Had Their Data Exposed in the Largest Education Cyberattack Ever Recorded. Here Is Exactly What Happened to Canvas

      May 19, 2026

      A Security Flaw in Hugging Face’s Robotics Platform Shows What Happens When Open-Source AI Begins Controlling Physical Machines

      May 10, 2026

      AI Is Making Identity the Most Dangerous Attack Surface in Cybersecurity. CrowdStrike’s $740 Million Bet Proves It.

      May 10, 2026
    PhronewsPhronews
    Home»Cybersecurity & Online Safety»Deepfake Zoom Calls Used in Corporate Fraud Attacks: Inside the Latest AI Social Engineering Scheme
    Cybersecurity & Online Safety

    Deepfake Zoom Calls Used in Corporate Fraud Attacks: Inside the Latest AI Social Engineering Scheme

    fariehanBy fariehanFebruary 17, 2026No Comments
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp Reddit Tumblr Email
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    Deepfake corporate fraud has evolved once again. Unlike traditional cyberattacks focused on phishing and faking invoices, attackers are now targeting zoom calls. 

    In several recent cases, attackers used AI-generated video and voice to impersonate executives during live meetings. The finance teams saw familiar faces and heard familiar voices so they assumed all was alright. It wasn’t until later that security teams discovered the deception. 

    How Deepfake Zoom Attacks Work

    Firstly, attackers gather materials from the internet. Public speaking videos, audio from interviews and social media clips are all a part of the tools used to create the deepfake. Then, they use generative AI tools to clone facial expressions and speech patterns. 

    Recently, there was a similar attack connected to a North Korean group. The hackers targeted a crypto company and sent a zoom link for a 30 minute call after originally contacting them via telegram. The victim was unsuspecting since they could see real executives on the screen. Then, the attackers used the pretense of having the victim fix their audio during the call to deploy several unique pieces of malware. 

    In many cases, the attacks follow a simple pattern. It usually starts with a compromised account or a deliberate act of impersonating an official. The attackers simulate a messenger call that drops constantly and blame it on the network. Then, they send a pre-generated low quality emergency video message. 

    As a result, the victim is convinced they’re legit and doesn’t question anything further. The attackers could make any type of request, from demanding credentials, confidential data or software installation. 

    Why Deepfake Fraud Succeeds

    Deepfake fraud is successful because it exploits human trust. People are quick to respond to visuals and voice before they realize something is off. 

    For example, employees feel pressured to react quickly when an executive makes a request especially during a live call. This urgency completely kills doubt. At the same time, a lot of companies still rely on email confirmations to approve transactions and if attackers have access to these channels, they can further reinforce the illusion. 

    Moreover, some attacks now feature multiple AI-generated participants in one meeting. In 2025, there was a case in Singapore where attackers used deepfake to impersonate a company’s executives and secured a huge transfer. However, due to cross-border cooperation between Singapore and Hong Kong, the money was eventually recovered. 

    Consequently, the risks these deepfakes pose goes beyond the employees, it affects the entire approval chain. 

    The Future of Corporate Security

    Right now, videos no longer suffice as a form of identity verification. Corporations need to redesign verification processes. 

    Security teams increasingly recommend multi-step verification processes. For instance, finance teams should require confirmation through a secure internal system or verified phone number that attackers don’t have access to. 

    At the same time, organizations must update their employee training. Staff need to treat urgent video meetings with the same scepticism as suspicious emails. In addition, layered authentication and behaviour monitoring can reduce exposure. 

    Deepfake attacks will continue to evolve. However, companies need to strengthen their security systems and identity verification to make these attacks harder to execute. 

    AI corporate fraud ai security risks AI social engineering scams AI voice cloning AI-phishing evolution Artificial Intelligence corporate cyber risk corporate security strategy cybersecurity Cybersecurity awareness training cybersecurity treats 2026 deepfake deepfake scam Deepfake xoom calls executive impersonation scam financial transfer fraud multi-factor verification synthetic media fraud What is AI social engineering Zoom fraud attacks
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Telegram Email
    fariehan

    Related Posts

    Startup Funding Is Falling in 2026 Unless You Have AI at the Core. Here Is What That Means for Every Founder Who Does Not

    May 22, 2026

    A Cybersecurity Firm Just Had Its Own Source Code Stolen. Trellix’s Breach Is the Most Embarrassing Kind and the Most Instructive One.

    May 22, 2026

    OpenAI Just Built a $4 Billion Company Designed to Live Inside Your Business Workflows. The Race to Own Enterprise AI Just Entered a New Phase.

    May 20, 2026

    Comments are closed.

    Top Posts

    Coinbase responds to hack: customer impact and official statement

    May 22, 2025

    Anthropic Will Use Claude User Chats For Data Training

    October 16, 2025

    Cursor AI Hits 1 Million Daily Users. Why Developers Are Switching to This Coding Tool

    March 23, 2026

    MIT Study Reveals ChatGPT Impairs Brain Activity & Thinking

    June 29, 2025
    Don't Miss
    Big Tech & Startups

    Microsoft Just Ended OpenAI’s Cloud Exclusivity. AWS Is Already Moving In and the Consequences for the AI Market Are Enormous

    By fariehanMay 22, 2026

    OpenAI cloud exclusivity just ended and the AI market already looks different. For years, Microsoft…

    Startup Funding Is Falling in 2026 Unless You Have AI at the Core. Here Is What That Means for Every Founder Who Does Not

    May 22, 2026

    A Cybersecurity Firm Just Had Its Own Source Code Stolen. Trellix’s Breach Is the Most Embarrassing Kind and the Most Instructive One.

    May 22, 2026

    OpenAI Just Built a $4 Billion Company Designed to Live Inside Your Business Workflows. The Race to Own Enterprise AI Just Entered a New Phase.

    May 20, 2026
    Stay In Touch
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    About Us
    About Us

    Evolving from Phronesis News, Phronews brings deep insight and smart analysis to the world of technology. Stay informed, stay ahead, and navigate tech with wisdom.
    We're accepting new partnerships right now.

    Email Us: info@phronews.com

    Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest YouTube
    Our Picks
    Most Popular

    Coinbase responds to hack: customer impact and official statement

    May 22, 2025

    Anthropic Will Use Claude User Chats For Data Training

    October 16, 2025

    Cursor AI Hits 1 Million Daily Users. Why Developers Are Switching to This Coding Tool

    March 23, 2026
    © 2025. Phronews.
    • Home
    • About Us
    • Get In Touch
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms and Conditions

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.