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Inside the scam (Part 5): Can anyone stop the scam economy?

Inside the scam (Part 5): Can anyone stop the scam economy?

Online fraud has evolved into a global industry supported by trafficking networks, stolen identities, artificial intelligence and an international system for moving money. Banks, technology companies and law-enforcement agencies are developing stronger defences, but stopping the scam economy will require them to act together before stolen funds disappear across borders.

Following the money
Every successful scam eventually faces the same problem: converting a victim’s payment into money that criminals can control.

Fraud networks use bank accounts opened with stolen identities, payment applications, shell companies, cryptocurrency exchanges and professional money launderers. Some recruit money mules who receive and forward payments in return for a commission.

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Others are deceived into participating through fake employment offers. They may believe they are processing legitimate business transactions until their accounts are frozen or police begin investigating.

Money can pass through several accounts within minutes before being converted into cryptocurrency or transferred abroad. By the time a victim reports the fraud, the funds may already have crossed several jurisdictions.

Banks build faster defences
Banks and payment companies are increasingly using artificial intelligence to identify unusual transactions. Systems can compare a payment with a customer’s normal behaviour, detect recently created recipient accounts and recognise patterns associated with known laundering networks.

Some banks now delay suspicious transfers or display warnings when customers attempt to send money to unfamiliar recipients. Confirmation systems can also check whether the name provided by the sender matches the account receiving the payment.

These measures help, but criminals constantly test the controls. They divide large payments into smaller transactions, coach victims on what to tell bank employees and move accounts between different institutions.

Preventing fraud can also inconvenience legitimate customers. Financial companies must balance rapid payments against the need to pause transactions that may represent someone’s life savings.

Technology companies face greater pressure
Social media platforms, messaging services and search engines provide the first point of contact for many scams. Fraudulent advertisements, impersonated celebrities, fake investment groups and stolen business identities can reach thousands of potential victims at little cost.

Technology companies are improving advertiser verification, removing fraudulent accounts and using automated systems to identify suspicious messages. Telecommunications companies are also blocking spoofed telephone numbers and tracing bulk text campaigns.

However, removing individual accounts does not dismantle the organisation behind them. Scam networks can quickly create new profiles, purchase fresh telephone numbers and use AI to produce different faces, voices and messages.

Law enforcement confronts a borderless industry
National police forces investigate crimes committed against their citizens, but the perpetrators, servers, bank accounts and victims may all be located in different countries.

Operations against scam compounds in Southeast Asia have rescued trafficking victims and seized equipment. Yet many organisations simply relocate, change their payment infrastructure or continue operating through smaller distributed teams.

Effective enforcement requires real-time cooperation between banks, cryptocurrency platforms, telecommunications companies and authorities across borders. Assets must be frozen within hours rather than after months of legal requests.

The final line of defence
There is no single technology capable of eliminating online fraud. The most effective response combines better financial controls, verified digital identities, faster international investigations and public awareness.

Victims should never be blamed for encountering deception designed by professional organisations. The responsibility belongs to the criminals and to the systems that allow them to operate repeatedly.

The scam economy can be reduced, but only when preventing fraud becomes more profitable and urgent than processing the next transaction. Until then, the final defence remains a brief pause before sending money: verify the person, question the urgency and never trust a promised return that depends on acting immediately.

Newshub Editorial in Global Affairs – 19 July 2026

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