Hacking Humans

Lost iPhone, found trouble.

Nov 20, 2025
This week, the hosts dive into alarming social engineering scams, including China's crackdown on a violent fraud gang and the extradition of a key scam figure. They discuss an unsettling sextortion method involving AI-generated images from unsolicited FaceTime calls. A debate erupts around the legitimacy of an AI-driven cyber-espionage claim by Anthropic amid skepticism from researchers. Plus, there's a warning about phishing attacks using lost iPhone contact info and mobile shopping threats during the holiday season.
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ANECDOTE

FaceTime Sextortion Attack

  • A sales employee answered an unsolicited FaceTime call and the caller captured a photo through FaceTime during the call.
  • The attacker later sent an AI-generated explicit image and demanded $5,000 while threatening to release it to the victim's contacts.
INSIGHT

Public Data Amplifies AI Extortion

  • Attackers combined an opportunistic FaceTime photo with AI image editing and publicly scraped contact lists to make extortion credible.
  • Publicly available people-search data makes targeted social blackmail trivial and believable.
ADVICE

Avoid Showing Camera To Unknown Callers

  • Answer FaceTime calls without enabling your camera when possible to avoid exposing live images to unknown callers.
  • Be cautious about accepting unsolicited video calls, especially in semi-public settings like your car.
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