Technology
AI voice scams can clone your family’s voice
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Your phone rings. It’s your son’s voice. Panicked. He says he’s been in a car accident. He hurt someone. He’s about to be arrested. He needs $15,000 wired before the end of the day, and please, don’t tell anyone yet. You’d wire the money. Of course you would. Except it isn’t your son.
It’s a scammer who spent about 10 minutes online, pulled three seconds of audio from a Facebook video your son posted last Christmas, and fed it into an AI voice cloning tool that costs less than a Netflix subscription. The voice that broke your heart wasn’t real. The emergency wasn’t real. But the $15,000 transfer? That would have been.
This is already happening to families right now, in every state. And what most people don’t understand is that the voice clone is actually the easy part. What makes these attacks so devastatingly effective is everything that happens before the call.
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AI CYBERSECURITY RISKS AND DEEPFAKE SCAMS ON THE RISE
Data broker profiles can give scammers phone numbers, relatives’ names and addresses that make AI voice scams more convincing. (Matthias Balk/picture alliance via Getty Images)
The technology has crossed a terrifying threshold.
AI can now clone a person’s voice using as little as three seconds of audio, pulled from a social media video, a voicemail greeting, or a voice message. The technology copies tone, speech patterns, and accents closely enough that many people can’t tell the difference between a real voice and a fake one.
Three seconds. That’s shorter than it took you to read that sentence. AI scams surged 1,210% in 2025, and global AI scam losses could reach $40 billion by 2027. This isn’t a slow-building trend. It’s an explosion.
A new study found that 1 in 4 adults have already experienced an AI voice scam. One in four. That’s your neighbor. Your coworker. Someone in your family. But here’s the thing nobody’s telling you.
The voice clone is the last step, not the first
Every article you’ve read about AI voice cloning focuses on the technology. The scarily realistic audio. The three seconds of audio that’s “all they need.” What those articles miss is the setup that happens before the call. A voice clone is useless without answers to two questions: Whose voice do I clone? And who do I call with it?
To answer both of those questions, scammers don’t need to hack anything. They go to the same places anyone can access right now: data broker websites. Armed with your phone number and personal details from a data broker profile, scammers can call you directly and reference your name, address, or recent transactions to appear legitimate. Here’s the step-by-step process, because you need to know exactly how this works.
Step 1: They find you (or your family member) on a people-search site
A scammer types your name into Spokeo, BeenVerified, or Whitepages. Within seconds, they have:
- Your age and current address
- Your phone number
- The names of your relatives, including your adult children and elderly parents
- Where you all used to live
- Estimated household income.
They didn’t hack anything. They paid a few dollars. Or nothing at all.
Step 2: They identify the right target and the right voice to clone
Once they have your family network mapped, they make a decision: Who’s the most vulnerable person to call? And whose voice will make them act?
5 STEPS TO PROTECT YOUR FINANCES FROM FAMILY SCAMS
Often, the target is an elderly parent. The cloned voice is a grandchild or adult child. That combination of a panicked young voice and an older parent who loves them is the most reliably devastating pairing a scammer can manufacture.
Then they go looking for audio. A Facebook video from Thanksgiving. A YouTube clip of a school play. A TikTok your kid posted last summer. Three seconds is enough. The AI tool replicates pitch, cadence, accent, and emotional inflection.
Step 3: They script the emergency
This is where the call starts to feel personal. Data broker profiles can reveal more than your phone number. Scammers may find relatives’ names, rough ages, your city, your property address and other public record details. Then they use those clues to make the fake emergency sound believable.
Scammers introduce physical excuses, like a broken nose or a bad connection, to cover any slight artifacts in the AI voice, then create maximum urgency. The victim is directed to wire money, send cryptocurrency, or hand cash to a “bail bondsman” courier who arrives at the door.
The call sounds real because it was built on real information. Your mother picks up. She hears her grandchild’s voice, the right name, the right emotional register, the right panic. Her rational brain doesn’t stand a chance.
Cybersecurity researchers have noted that the emotional realism of a cloned voice removes the mental barrier to skepticism. When it sounds like your loved one, your rational defenses tend to shut down.
AI voice cloning scams can use short audio clips and public personal data to make fake family emergencies sound real. (Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson)
Real families. Real losses
In one documented case in Florida, a woman lost $15,000 after receiving a call from her “crying daughter.” She withdrew cash and placed it in a box, which a driver came to collect from her house. Another call, and a larger money request, soon followed.
The Trapp family in the San Francisco Bay Area received a frantic call from their “son” saying he’d been in a car accident, injured a pregnant woman, and needed urgent help. The scammers posed not only as the son but also as police, instructing the mother to quickly withdraw $15,000 and hand it to a courier already on the way. The family became suspicious just in time and called their son directly. They were the lucky ones.
Hiya’s Q4 2024 Global Call Threat Report found that one-third of survey respondents across the US, UK, Canada, Germany, France, and Spain encountered deepfake voice fraud in 2024 and 30% of those who encountered it fell victim.
“But I don’t post videos of myself online”
Neither did some of the victims’ families. You don’t need to be the one posting. Your grandchild’s TikTok account, your daughter’s Facebook, your son’s YouTube channel, or any public audio of them is all the scammer needs.
And even if your entire family has locked down social media? The data broker profile built on you, listing your phone number, your relatives’ names, and your address, is still there, still searchable, and still pointing scammers directly at the most vulnerable people in your network.
Here’s an uncomfortable truth: data brokers update their databases constantly. Your information can be pulled from voter registration records, property filings, court documents, marketing surveys, and loyalty programs, none of which require your permission. You likely have a profile on dozens of sites right now that you’ve never seen. You can run a free scan to see exactly how exposed you are. Results usually arrive within an hour.
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Why removing yourself from data brokers disrupts the entire attack chain
The voice clone is only one part of the scam. The targeting makes it work. When you remove your family’s information from data broker sites, you cut off the scammer’s research. They may lose access to your mother’s phone number, your relatives’ names or clues about who lives alone. Without that personal map, it becomes much harder to choose the right target and the right voice to clone.
Data broker profiles might link your mobile number to your home address and your relatives’ names. That makes family scams, now frequently enhanced by AI voice cloning, much easier for criminals to execute.
This is why I recommend using a data removal service. It can automatically send removal requests to hundreds of data broker and people search websites on your behalf. It can also keep monitoring and resubmitting requests when your data reappears. Because it will reappear. That’s how these sites work.
Check out my top picks for data removal services and get a free scan to find out if your personal information is already out on the web by visiting Cyberguy.com
Get a free scan to find out if your personal information is already out on the web: Cyberguy.com/FreeScan
Scammers may clone a loved one’s voice, claim there is an emergency and pressure relatives to send money immediately. (Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson)
Five things to do right now
Beyond removing your data, do these things this week:
THE ONE THING THAT COULD PROTECT YOUR PARENTS FROM SCAMMERS
1) Create a family code word
Pick something random, “purple cactus,” “blue kettle,” anything unconnected to your actual life. Every family member agrees: any emergency call requesting money must include this word before anyone acts. Scammers cannot guess it. No data broker sells it.
2) Establish a callback rule
No matter how real a voice sounds, hang up and call the person back at their known number, not the number that called you. Real emergencies can wait two minutes for a callback. Scammers count on the panic preventing exactly this.
3) Lock down family members’ social media
Set profiles to friends only. Limit public videos. The less audio of your family that’s publicly available, the harder voice cloning becomes. Talk to your kids and grandkids about this specifically.
4) Warn your most vulnerable relatives directly
Don’t assume they’ll figure this out. Have a specific, explicit conversation: “If you get a call that sounds like me asking for money, stop. Ask for our code word. Call me back at my number. It might not be me.”
5) Never wire money, use gift cards, or hand cash to a courier based on a phone call alone
This is how every one of these scams ends. The payment method itself is the red flag. Legitimate emergencies don’t require Venmo, wire transfers, or a courier showing up at your door.
Kurt’s key takeaways
AI voice scams work because they sound personal. A scammer may only need a few seconds of public audio to copy a loved one’s voice and make a fake emergency feel real. However, the voice clone is only part of the attack. Scammers also use data broker and people-search sites to find phone numbers, family connections and personal details that make the call more convincing. That is why a simple family code word can help stop panic before money changes hands. So can a strict callback rule, locked-down social media and direct conversations with older relatives before a scammer calls. The best defense is to slow the moment down. Hang up, call your loved one directly and never send money, crypto, gift cards or cash to a courier based only on a phone call.
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If a phone call sounded exactly like someone you love asking for help, would you stop long enough to question it? Let us know by writing to us at Cyberguy.com
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Technology
Starship delivery robots leave campuses for cities
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Those little white robots that once rolled across college sidewalks with lattes, fries and late-night snacks are getting a new assignment. Starship Technologies recently announced that it will wind down its U.S. university campus operations and redeploy more than 1,200 robots toward grocery chains and hot food delivery in cities across the United States and Europe.
If you have ever watched one of these robots patiently wait at a crosswalk like a polite cooler on wheels, you know why students got attached. They became part campus convenience, part mascot. Now, the company is moving from a controlled campus setting into a much tougher public test.
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That raises the bigger question: will these cute campus robots be just as welcome when they start sharing crowded city sidewalks with you?
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Starship is winding down U.S. campus robot operations as it expands grocery delivery in the U.S. and Europe. (Starship)
Why Starship is pulling robots from college campuses
Starship says the decision comes down to focus. The company says its grocery delivery operations are on a 10x growth trajectory over the next two years, driven by demand from major retailers in the United States and Europe.
In Finland, Starship says its robots already complete roughly one in five grocery deliveries. That gives the company a real-world model it wants to repeat elsewhere. To support that expansion, more than 1,200 robots from U.S. campus fleets will be moved into grocery delivery. For Starship, that is a major pivot. Campuses helped the company build its brand in the U.S. They also gave the robots a place to learn.
Why college campuses were the perfect robot testing ground
Starship made a big U.S. splash at George Mason University in 2019, when the school became the first U.S. university to offer autonomous robot deliveries from Starship. From there, the robots spread to dozens of campuses. That made sense. College students are often hungry at odd hours. Many live without a full kitchen. They also tend to be open to new tech, especially when it brings food to the dorm without small talk.
During the pandemic, contactless delivery became even more appealing. A robot that could roll up with lunch while limiting person-to-person contact suddenly felt useful in a very different way.
The campus pullback will not happen overnight
Starship says it has worked with its university campuses and industry partners to keep service running through the 2026–2027 back-to-school season, with transition plans in place to reduce disruption. So, this does not appear to be an instant shutdown where every campus robot disappears at once. Instead, the company is moving away from the university model while preparing its fleet for a bigger push into grocery and restaurant delivery.
For students who loved the bots, it may still feel like the end of an era. For Starship, though, it is a move toward the market where the company believes the economics are stronger. Starship CEO and co-founder Ahti Heinla says the company’s robots can deliver groceries at a cost $3-$4 lower per delivery than traditional courier fulfillment. That is the kind of claim that gets the attention of retailers trying to make last-mile delivery less expensive.
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Why city sidewalks could be a tougher test
The next phase could get messy. Delivery robots have to share sidewalks with people who are walking, pushing strollers, using wheelchairs, carrying groceries or trying to catch a bus. That means every design choice matters. A robot that blocks a curb ramp can create a real problem. A robot that pauses in the wrong spot can turn from cute to irritating fast. If one reverses unexpectedly or gets stuck near a crosswalk, the novelty wears off even faster.
There have already been warning signs. Reports have described delivery robots bumping into people, getting stuck in odd places and raising accessibility concerns. Chicago has also seen local pushback and safety concerns around sidewalk delivery robots, which shows Starship still has work to do if it wants city residents to embrace them. That is the challenge Starship now faces. The same robot that felt charming on a campus may feel like clutter on a narrow sidewalk.
Starship Technologies is shifting more than 1,200 campus delivery robots to grocery and restaurant deliveries in cities. (Starship)
What grocery delivery changes
Grocery delivery is a different business from campus food delivery. A college order might be a sandwich, a soda or a late-night snack. A grocery run can involve heavier items, more frequent routes and customers who expect reliability every time. If Starship can make that work, the payoff could be huge. Grocery stores want cheaper local delivery. Customers want speed without sky-high fees. Cities want fewer cars clogging short delivery routes.
Starship says the global food delivery market is now worth $650 billion and needs delivery systems with higher autonomy levels. The company also says it has completed more than 10 million deliveries, which gives it a sizable head start in the sidewalk robot category.
However, the public will need convincing. People may welcome a robot bringing milk and eggs on a rainy night. They may also get annoyed if that same robot blocks a sidewalk during the morning rush. That will all decide whether sidewalk robots become normal or face more local limits.
Why Estonia still matters to Starship
Starship was founded in Tallinn, Estonia, in 2014 by Ahti Heinla and Janus Friis. Estonia remains home to the company’s core engineering and AI development team. That is important because this shift is not only about where the robots operate.
The big question for robot delivery
Starship’s move shows where the delivery robot business is headed. College campuses helped make the robots likable. Grocery delivery may determine whether they become profitable. Still, the sidewalks belong to the public. That means companies need more than clever machines. They need trust, clear rules and designs that respect people who move through cities in different ways.
A delivery robot should never make a sidewalk harder to use for someone with a cane, stroller or wheelchair. It should not turn public space into an obstacle course. If companies want these robots to feel normal, they need to prove they can operate without making daily life more frustrating.
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Starship says grocery delivery demand is pushing its robot fleet from college campuses into urban neighborhoods. (Starship)
What this means to you
You may start seeing more delivery robots near grocery stores, restaurants and apartment-heavy neighborhoods. If that happens, pay attention to how they behave in your area. Look for whether they yield to pedestrians, avoid curb ramps and handle crowded sidewalks well. Also, check whether your city has rules for personal delivery devices. Some places allow pilot programs, while others limit where these robots can operate.
If a robot causes a problem, document it safely. Take a photo or video, note the location and report it to your city or the delivery company. That is important because local officials need real examples, not vague frustration, when they decide what rules should apply. There is also a privacy angle. These robots use sensors and cameras to navigate. Companies may say the data supports safe operation, but you still deserve clear answers about what gets collected, how long it is kept and whether law enforcement can request it.
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Kurt’s key takeaways
Starship’s campus exit feels like the end of a quirky era, especially for students who got used to seeing the little robots rolling around campus. But this shift also tells us something bigger about where autonomous delivery is going. The next battle will happen on city sidewalks, not college campuses. If these robots save money and reduce short car trips, they could become very useful. But if they crowd walkways or create safety headaches, people will push back hard. To me, the real test is pretty clear. Robot delivery needs to work for everyone on the sidewalk, including people who never ordered anything.
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Would you be ok with a delivery robot on your block, or would you rather keep your sidewalks robot-free? Let us know by writing to us at CyberGuy.com.
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- For simple, real-world ways to spot scams early and stay protected, visit CyberGuy.com – trusted by millions who watch CyberGuy on TV daily.
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Copyright 2026 CyberGuy.com. All rights reserved.
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