Itek Systems Blog
The New Era of Phishing: Don’t Trust Every Phone Call
For years, the gold standard for avoiding a scam was simple: if an email looked suspicious, you just picked up the phone to verify it. Unfortunately, that safety net is fraying. Cybercriminals are now leveraging AI voice cloning to turn a quick phone call into a sophisticated trap.
How AI Voice Cloning Works
The barrier to entry for voice spoofing has dropped significantly. Using a process known as vocal synthesis, scammers only need a small sample of audio—often pulled from social media, webinars, or public interviews—to create a digital clone.
- Scammers scrape audio of a target (e.g., a CEO or manager).
- AI software creates a voice skin that mimics their unique tone and cadence.
- Text-to-speech tools allow the scammer to speak in that voice in real-time.
As entertainer Daniel Thrasher recently demonstrated, this technology makes it terrifyingly easy to impersonate someone. While it might start with a lost garage code ruse for individuals, for businesses, it usually ends in an urgent request for a wire transfer or sensitive login credentials.
Protecting Your Organization: Challenge-Response Protocols
When high-tech threats emerge, low-tech solutions are often the most effective. To counter voice cloning, businesses should adopt a challenge-response protocol; essentially Multi-Factor Authentication (MFA) for human conversation.
Any request involving funds, passwords, or sensitive data made over the phone must be confirmed via a secondary, pre-approved channel (such as a direct message, an encrypted internal app, or a pre-shared safe word).
3 Red Flags of an AI-Generated Call
While deepfakes are becoming more seamless, they often leave behind digital fingerprints. Watch out for:
- Unnatural pauses - Slight delays while the software processes the text-to-speech command.
- Mismatched inflection - The voice may sound monotone or fail to express the appropriate emotion for the urgent situation.
- Artificial backgrounds - Be wary of repetitive office noise or static that loops perfectly.
Above all: Beware of extreme urgency. If a caller is pressuring you to bypass standard security protocols, hang up immediately. Call them back on a known, trusted number to verify the request.
Stay One Step Ahead
Cyberthreats are evolving, but your defenses can too. We specialize in keeping businesses secure against the next generation of social engineering.
Contact us at (440) 510-8611 to bolster your security strategy today.

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