Times of Malta

Fake video shows Muscat promoting a crypto scam

A similar video of Robert Abela was also shared in recent days

- NEVILLE BORG

A video doing the rounds on Facebook shows former prime minister Joseph Muscat promoting a crypto platform called Nord Invest.

“What is the best thing to invest in in 2024,” Muscat asks rhetorical­ly in the 50-second video. “Obviously, it’s oil and cryptocurr­ency,” he says.

Muscat goes on to describe Nord Invest as “a reliable investment platform”, explaining that he started his investment with just €250 and went on to earn between 20% and 100% in annual returns thanks to the platform’s “100 profession­al brokers”.

The video shows a younger Muscat promoting the crypto platform.

But this video is simply the latest example of a widespread scam that has now hit Malta’s shores, mixing real footage of celebritie­s or politician­s and AI-generated audio.

In reality, the footage used in this scam is taken from an interview that Muscat had carried out with Sky News UK over a decade ago, back in October 2013.

In the original interview, a fresh-faced Muscat can be seen speaking to Sky News correspond­ent Stuart Ramsay about migration across the Mediterran­ean, arguing for more European solidarity with border countries such as Malta.

The scam video does away with all the talk of migration, solidarity and geopolitic­s, replacing it instead with a crude voiceover about the crypto platform, using deepfake

technology to synchronis­e much of the speech with Muscat’s lip movements, making it appear more legitimate.

The video is being shared by a Facebook page by the name of KETO, which describes itself as a beauty, cosmetic and personal care page. Despite having been opened in mid-December last year, the page only has a handful of followers.

Bizarrely, the page uses an image of veteran actor Mel Gibson as its Facebook cover image, misgenderi­ng the bearded Braveheart star in the process and telling readers that “famous singer Mel Gibson shared the secret to her transforma­tion”.

A deeper dive into the page’s activity reveals that it has shared several similarly doctored videos over the past weeks, some featuring other political figures, including one of outgoing Irish Taoiseach Leo Varadkar.

RobeRt AbelA goes FoR oil tRAding

The same page also shared a similarly altered video of current Prime Minister Robert Abela in recent days.

The video was also shared by other fraudulent Facebook pages, including one which, in an act of admirable modesty, calls itself Marketing Blackhole.

This page was created in early January but shows little sign of life, only posting a handful of cookie-cutter template images to its profiles over the past three months.

Unlike Muscat, who chose to invest in cryptocurr­ency, Abela’s video shows him opting for oil instead, promoting oil trading through the imaginativ­ely named platform Oil Profit in the fraudulent video.

“Residents of Malta, I would like to tell you about a new investment programme with the Oil Profit campaign,” he says in the doctored video.

As is the case with Muscat, the video of Abela uses real footage, this time taken from a video that Abela had recorded for NGO Global Citizen back in February 2021.

In the original video, Abela talks about Malta’s efforts to combat the spread of the COVID-19 pandemic and minimise its impacts.

Once again, the original video’s audio track is replaced by an AI-generated fake script, designed to mimic Abela’s voice.

Searches into the Oil Profit platform that Abela is supposedly

promoting shows how countless people around the world have been bitten by the scam after falling for similar fake videos, often using well-known figures such as Prince Harry.

Similar scams have been detected in the past, often using internatio­nal political and public figures, including European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen and actor Russell Crowe.

However, doctored videos of Maltese public figures will likely proliferat­e as AI tools become more widespread and easier to use.

VeRdict

Videos showing Muscat and Abela promoting cryptocurr­ency and oil trading platforms are doctored.

In both cases, genuine video footage was edited and overlaid with an AI-generated audio track to make it appear as though they were promoting a fraudulent scheme.

These videos are the latest in a long line of similar scams using celebritie­s, politician­s and public figures to promote fraudulent schemes and services.

This claim is, therefore, false as the evidence clearly refutes the claim.

 ?? ?? A doctored video shows Joseph Muscat promoting a fraudulent crypto scheme.
A doctored video shows Joseph Muscat promoting a fraudulent crypto scheme.

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