The Dark Side Of Technology: Navigating The Threat Of Digital Impersonation
Bernard Marr
?? Internationally Best-selling #Author?? #KeynoteSpeaker?? #Futurist?? #Business, #Tech & #Strategy Advisor
Thank you for reading my latest article?The Dark Side Of Technology: Navigating The Threat Of Digital Impersonation.?Here at LinkedIn and at Forbes I regularly write about management and technology trends.
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Digital impersonation – when someone uses the name, image, or other identifying elements of a person, organization, or company for nefarious or fraudulent purposes – is on the rise on social media and other online platforms.
The U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) estimates that impersonation attacks have caused global losses of over $5.3 billion.
With so much of our lives happening online, we all need to cultivate strong digital threat awareness skills
Using this tactic, a cybercriminal can create a profile on a social media platform by stealing and using personally identifiable information (including your name, image, location, and background details). Scammers can impersonate individuals or organizations on social media, and you could be interacting with these fake accounts online.
Here are a few of the reasons cybercriminals create these types of fraudulent accounts:
●????Phishing, or attempting to steal other people’s money, passwords, or personal data
●????Getting individuals to click on malicious links
●????Catfishing (using fake identities to form dishonest relationships online)
How to Protect Yourself Against Digital Impersonation
So how do you spot fake accounts? In general, fake accounts have been recently created, with only a few friends or followers. They will sometimes send odd-sounding messages that include suspicious links, or there may be spelling errors in their account names, URLs, or messages.
Be vigilant when you’re online, and don’t share personal information or images when you accept new friend or follower requests. Never give money to someone who asks for it online, and leave any site that looks suspicious.
If you’re concerned that scammers might steal your identity, adjust your privacy settings so your profile isn’t public, and think carefully about any information you share in your profile updates. For example, personal information like your kids’ or pets’ names could be used to create a fake digital account under your name.
To look for hackers who may have stolen your digital identity, do a regular online search for your name and see what comes up. With a reverse image search
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How the Metaverse Could Contribute to the Problem
The metaverse – a persistent, shared virtual world users can access through different devices and platforms using an avatar –?is already delivering far more immersive experiences for users worldwide, and development is just getting started.
But with the wonder and awe that will come with the immersive world of the metaverse, there are also dangers.
In the metaverse, your online friends are recognizable because they appear as custom avatars. But a hacker could hijack your metaverse identity to perpetrate acts of fraud. For example, once a hacker is in your account, they could contact your friends and ask for passwords, data, money, or other information, all while posing as you online.
This kind of impersonation scam in the metaverse is even more intrusive and violating than other types of online impersonation, and it could lead to substantial financial or reputational damage.
You also risk unknowingly interacting with scammers in the metaverse. When a hacker appears in front of you in the metaverse, you may think you’re interacting with a friend – but it could be a stranger with bad intentions.
Metaverse users will need to be trained on how to avoid these types of social impersonation attacks to protect themselves and their networks.
Looking to the Future
Human beings are wired to trust others, and we have a deep need for connection that we often satisfy through digital interactions. Cybercriminals take advantage of these qualities and prey upon people who are consuming content quickly and can get caught off guard if they’re not paying close attention.
Researchers and other cybersecurity professionals are working with law enforcement and legal experts to find answers to this growing problem, but it’s in our best interest to cultivate digital threat awareness skills to protect ourselves against having our online identities hacked.
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To learn more about how to develop digital threat awareness and other essential skills in my new book Future Skills: The 20 Skills And Competencies Everyone Needs To Succeed In A Digital World, subscribe to?my newsletter, and connect with me on?Twitter, LinkedIn, and YouTube.
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About Bernard Marr
Bernard Marr is a world-renowned futurist, influencer and thought leader in the fields of business and technology, with a passion for using technology for the good of humanity. He is a?best-selling author of 21 books, writes a regular column for Forbes and advises and coaches many of the world’s best-known organisations. He has over 2 million social media followers, 1.7 million newsletter subscribers and was ranked by LinkedIn as one of the top 5 business influencers in the world and the No 1 influencer in the UK.
Bernard’s latest books are ‘Business Trends in Practice: The 25+ Trends That Are Redefining Organisations’ and ‘Future Skills: The 20 Skills and Competencies Everyone Needs To Succeed In A Digital World’.?
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1 年I big problem indeed! Knowledge and awareness is the best defence against this. Great article!
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1 年I have been IMPERSONATED by corrupt lawyers, associated with also-corrupt BANK Managers, here in Canada. Associated also with corrupt HACKERS and MAFFIAS (people involved in drugs-dealing internationally, also walking on the streets of the world. WHY? Because, as a professional Filmmaker, receiving INVESTMENTS and also DONATIONS, sent to my Bank account at TD Bank, and "blocked" together between "corrupt lawyers", who have imitated my signature, my legal-name pretending that "I HAD ALLOWED THEM", "without my permission and without any CONTRACT". Those international FUNDS came from the country, were I was born (Chile), business investors in the Gold-Mining business, had been impressed by my international 31-LECTURES, at "www.rickyradio.com" (a complete information about SCIENCE, SPIRITUALITY, all RELIGIONS, Human HISTORY, a new anthropology, a NEW PSYCHOLOGY, and a NEW COSMOLOGY. Those who BLOCKED my voice and the one of legal owner RICHARD ROOCROFT, are the same "partners in crime", with those blocking funds sent to y Bank account (corrupt Lawyers, corrupt Bank Managers and also MAFFIAS (hackers and drug-dealers" JIM ROSS "www.rickyradio.com", JIM ROSS.
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1 年Bernard Marr, thank you for acknowledging some of the problems associated with technology.
?? Award-Winning NAR Safety Podcast Host! | Workforce Dev Instructor| STEM AI Lead | Business-Building Safe Practices| Risk & Liability Reduction | Safety Culture| High-Energy Keynote Speaker, Instructor & Writer |
1 年Thank you for helping to shine the light on the other side of this incredible technology. Your article title is similar to mine. I'd love to chat with you! I am raising the red flag on these cyber dangers in the real estate industry. Great job! ??