The Daily Telegraph - Saturday

WPP boss impersonat­ed in deepfake scam

- By James Warrington

THE boss of one of the world’s largest advertisin­g companies was impersonat­ed by artificial intelligen­ce (AI) in an elaborate deepfake scam.

Fraudsters mimicked Mark Read, chief executive of WPP, in a recent video meeting in an attempt to solicit money and personal details from the boss of one of the group’s agencies.

The scammers created a fake WhatsApp account with a publicly available image of Mr Read before using this to set up a Microsoft Teams meeting with the agency chief. They subsequent­ly deployed an AI-powered voice clone and YouTube footage to imitate Mr Read and a fellow WPP executive.

Details of the scam, which was not successful, were outlined in an email from Mr Read to senior members of staff. In the email, first reported by The

Guardian, Mr Read wrote: “Fortunatel­y the attackers were not successful. We all need to be vigilant to the techniques that go beyond emails to take advantage of virtual meetings, AI and deepfakes.”

It marks the latest attempt by scammers to harness new AI-generated technologi­es to trick corporatio­ns and their staff into handing over money or sensitive data. Rapid advances in technology mean criminals can now assume a person’s likeness and imitate their voice with brief snippets of video footage.

Mr Read wrote: “We have seen increasing sophistica­tion in the cyberattac­ks on our colleagues, and those targeted at senior leaders in particular.”

The advertisin­g chief urged staff to look out for “red flags” in potential scams, including requests to hand over passport details or transfer money.

A WPP spokesman said: “Thanks to the vigilance of our people, including the executive concerned, the incident was prevented.”

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