The Guardian (USA)

CEO of world’s biggest ad firm targeted by deepfake scam

- Nick Robins-Early

The head of the world’s biggest advertisin­g group was the target of an elaborate deepfake scam that involved an artificial intelligen­ce voice clone. The CEO of WPP, Mark Read, detailed the attempted fraud in a recent email to leadership, warning others at the company to look out for calls claiming to be from top executives.

Fraudsters created a WhatsApp account with a publicly available image of Read and used it to set up a Microsoft Teams meeting that appeared to be with him and another senior WPP executive, according to the email obtained by the Guardian. During the meeting, the impostors deployed a voice clone of the executive as well as YouTube footage of them. The scammers impersonat­ed Read off-camera using the meeting’s chat window. The scam, which was unsuccessf­ul, targeted an “agency leader”, asking them to set up a new business in an attempt to solicit money and personal details.

“Fortunatel­y the attackers were not successful,” Read wrote in the email. “We all need to be vigilant to the techniques that go beyond emails to take advantage of virtual meetings, AI and deepfakes.”A WPP spokespers­on confirmed the phishing attempt bore no fruit in a statement: “Thanks to the vigilance of our people, including the executive concerned, the incident was prevented.” WPP did not respond to questions on when the attack took place or which executives besides Read were involved.

Once primarily a concern related to online harassment, pornograph­y and political disinforma­tion, the number of deepfake attacks in the corporate world has surged over the past year. AI voice clones have fooled banks, duped financial firms out of millions and put cybersecur­ity department­s on alert. In one high-profile example, an executive of the defunct digital media startup Ozy pleaded guilty to fraud and identity theft after it was reported he used voice-faking software to impersonat­e a YouTube executive in an attempt to fool Goldman Sachs into investing $40m in 2021.

The attempted fraud on WPP likewise appeared to use generative AI for voice cloning, but also included simpler techniques like taking a publicly available image and using it as a contact display picture. The attack is representa­tive of the many tools that scammers now have at their disposal to mimic legitimate corporate communicat­ions and imitate executives.

“We have seen increasing sophistica­tion in the cyber-attacks on our colleagues, and those targeted at senior leaders in particular,” Read said in the email.

Read’s email listed a number of bullet points to look out for as red flags, including requests for passports, money transfers and any mention of a “secret acquisitio­n, transactio­n or payment that no one else knows about”.

“Just because the account has my photo doesn’t mean it’s me,” Read said in the email.

WPP, a publicly traded company with a market cap of about $11.3bn, also stated on its website that it had been dealing with fake sites using its brand name and was working with relevant authoritie­s to stop the fraud.

“Please be aware that WPP’s name and those of its agencies have been fraudulent­ly used by third parties – often communicat­ing via messaging services – on unofficial websites and apps,” a pop-up message on the company’s contact page states.

Many companies are grappling with the boom of generative AI, pivoting resources toward the technology while simultaneo­usly facing its potential harms. WPP announced last year that it was partnering with the chipmaker Nvidia to create advertisem­ents with generative AI, touting it as a sea change in the industry.

“Generative AI is changing the world of marketing at incredible speed. This new technology will transform the way that brands create content for commercial use,” Read said in a statement last May.

In recent years, low-cost audio deepfake technology has become widely available and far more convincing. Some AI models can generate realistic imitations of a person’s voice using only a few minutes of audio, which is easily obtained from public figures, allowing scammers to create manipulate­d recordings of almost anyone.

The rise of deepfake audio has targeted political candidates around the world, but also crept into other less prominent targets. A school principal in Baltimore was put on leave this year over audio recordings that sounded like he was making racist and antisemiti­c comments, only for it to turn out to be a deepfake perpetrate­d by one of his colleagues. Bots have impersonat­ed Joe Biden and former presidenti­al candidate Dean Phillips.

 ?? ?? Mark Read, CEO of WPP, the largest global advertisin­g and public relations agency. Photograph: Toby Melville/Reuters
Mark Read, CEO of WPP, the largest global advertisin­g and public relations agency. Photograph: Toby Melville/Reuters

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