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    AI-enabled scams rose 500% in 2025 as crypto theft goes ‘industrial’

    TRM Labs says $35 billion in crypto was sent to scammer addresses globally last year as fraudsters scaled their operations with AI and businesslike efficiency.

    The use of large language models in scams increased fivefold in 2025, according to TRM Labs, as fraudsters leveraged the technology to boost outreach, make scams more convincing, and launch them at scale. 

    It comes as $35 billion in cryptocurrency was sent to scammer addresses globally last year, a slight decrease from $38 billion in the previous year, TRM Labs said in its 2026 crypto crime report on Wednesday.  

    “Large language models (LLMs) enable scams to cross language and cultural contexts with less friction, while AI-generated images, voice cloning, and deepfake videos reduce the cost of creating convincing personas,” the firm said. 

    In March last year, at least three crypto founders reported foiling an attempt from alleged North Korean hackers to steal sensitive data through fake Zoom calls that used deepfakes.

    “These capabilities are expanding impersonation-style scams across messaging platforms, recruitment campaigns, and investment fraud — and they increase the likelihood that victims can be deceived even when aware of scam warnings,” TRM Labs said.

    image
    AI-powered deepfakes are becoming a standard tool to create more convincing scams. Source: TRM Labs 

    Scammers are starting to combine fraud tactics

    Another trend last year was the convergence of scam tactics, according to TRM Labs, with crypto scammers increasingly using a multifaceted approach to dupe victims.

    TRM Labs said this could start with a romance scam to build trust, then transition to offering fake investments once trust is established, and end with a tax scam that demands payment for non-existent tax and administrative fees.

    “A defining trend in the current state of crypto fraud is the convergence of distinct scam typologies. Victim journeys increasingly span multiple phases of deception, combining elements of romance scams, investment fraud, and advance fee schemes,” the firm said.

    “Although social engineering remains a key component of fraud campaigns, it is now reinforced by technical and organizational innovations that make fraud more scalable and harder to detect.”

    Scam networks operating with a businesslike structure  

    The layered approach by fraudsters reflects a shift toward more sophisticated scam campaigns and a more businesslike model, using efficient structures, specialization, and standardized playbooks to target and exploit victims at scale, it added.

    Related: Social engineering cost crypto billions in 2025: How to protect yourself

    Behind the scenes, there is also a growing ecosystem of illicit service providers offering support with tools, techniques, and recruitment pipelines that resemble legitimate hiring processes.

    “Some offer AI-as-a-service tools to automate outreach and engagement, while others sell phishing kits or provide access to breached data. These services lower the barrier to entry for fraud actors and enable them to replicate scams across geographies,” TRM Labs said.

    Illicit volume up 146% from 2024

    TRM Labs estimates that illicit crypto wallets received about $158 billion in value last year, a roughly 146% increase from 2024’s $64 billion, driven by increased sanctions against countries like Russia and technological advances in monitoring that revealed more activity. 

    image
    Source: TRM Labs

    However, despite the increase in illicit volume, its share of overall crypto volume fell from 1.3% in 2024 to 1.2% in 2025.

    Magazine: 6 weirdest devices people have used to mine Bitcoin and crypto

    Cointelegraph is committed to independent, transparent journalism. This news article is produced in accordance with Cointelegraph’s Editorial Policy and aims to provide accurate and timely information. Readers are encouraged to verify information independently. Read our Editorial Policy https://cointelegraph.com/editorial-policy

     

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