(Will Jackson’s article from the ABC NEWS on 16 May 2024.)
KNA-Controlled Shwe-Koke-Ko in Myanmar. |
It's not just another new TikTok filter. The video
is advertising a real-time deepfake face-swapping system reportedly being
employed by South-East Asian crime syndicates in so-called "pig
butchering" cyberscam operations.
Experts say the technology and other new artificial intelligence (AI) tools — such as generative AI chatbots — are increasing the effectiveness of the scams and broadening their reach to new victims. However, some of the scam operations appear to be having less success with the new tech than others.
Proliferation of 'pig butchering'
Since 2020,
scores of predominantly Chinese-run call-centre style scam operations have
sprung up across South-East Asia mostly in Cambodia, Myanmar and Laos. Their
trademark is "Sha Zhu Pan"or "pig butchering" scams in
which victims are contacted through social media or text messages, befriended
or seduced and then lured into fake investment schemes — usually
cryptocurrency.
The syndicates
initially employed and victimised mostly ethnic Chinese but are reportedly
increasingly targeting people from different nationalities following a
crackdown by Beijing. Operating out of tall office buildings in fortified
compounds, the typical team has "keyboarders" who chat with the
victims via messaging apps, models who act as the face and voice of a scam and
bosses who manage the operations.
Their
proliferation has led to a massive surge in scam activity, with lives ruined
across the globe and total losses in the billions of dollars. And according to
the authorities, AI is making their scams even more effective.
Earlier this
year the United Nations Office of Drugs and Crime (UNODC) warned "recent
advances in large language model-based chatbots, deepfake technology, and
automation" had enabled "more sophisticated and damaging cyber fraud
schemes".
"By using
artificial intelligence (AI) to create computer-generated images and voices
that are virtually indistinguishable from real ones, scammers can execute
social engineering scams with alarming success rates, exploiting people's trust
and emotions," the organisation said.
'A very, very, very twisted thing'
Many of those
working these cyberscam operations are lured from other countries with promises
of legitimate jobs before being forced to work in slave-like conditions.
Escapees have reported being beaten and tortured.
Judah Tana is the director of Global Advance Projects, a Thailand-based NGO which has aided hundreds of trafficking victims who have escaped from scam compounds in Myanmar.
In response to the proliferation of sweatshop-style online scam centres in South-East Asia, individual volunteers and groups have stepped up — often at great personal risk. Mr Tana said the crime syndicates had made AI research and development a priority since "day one" and were willing to go to great lengths to get the most advanced technology.
He said some
scam compounds in Myanmar were using advanced face-swapping tech. "It's
not everywhere, but it is in some of the larger ones for sure, and they're just
always moving to increase and get better," he told the ABC.
Among the people
he had helped was a computer engineer whose sole job was AI development for the
syndicates, he said. Mr Tana and his associated partners aided her after she
managed to slip away, despite being accompanied by security guards, during a
visit to a coffee shop in northern Myanmar.
"She said
[their technology] was more advanced than anything she had seen in the world,
anything she had ever studied," he said.
KNA (BGF) Boss General Saw Chit Thu. |
(A blue Chinese-style multistory building in the background with a river in the foreground. Shwe Kokko is a notorious "scam city" controlled by the Karen National Army (KNA) formerly the BGF in the Myawaddy area of Myanmar.)
Mr Tana said to
motivate the woman, compound managers had brought people into the room and
beaten them in front of her. "It's a very, very, very twisted thing. But
it's not an isolated case," he said.
(Below is The video of similar beating at a Laukai Scam Centre called The Tiger House from the Kokang Territory in late 2023.)