logo
Gen Z Most Likely to Suffer Extortion Scams

Gen Z Most Likely to Suffer Extortion Scams

Newsweek11-06-2025
Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources.
While Gen Z might have grown up immersed in technology, they are now the number one target for extortion scammers, according to a new report.
In Malwarebytes's new Mobile Scam Report, Gen Z was deemed the top extortion target, with 28 percent of the age group experiencing extortion scams. This was far higher than both Gen X and baby boomers, at 15 and 7 percent, respectively.
Why It Matters
Extortion scams are criminal schemes where the fraudster attempts to blackmail a victim for money or personal information.
While scammers might threaten physical harm, the digital age has ushered in a new type of scammer, with many targeting younger people with threats of releasing sexually explicit photographs or videos to the world. They also may claim to be the police, requesting money or personal data if the victim wants to avoid arrest.
In this photo illustration, a 13-year-old boy looks at an iPhone screen display on May 21 in Bath, England.
In this photo illustration, a 13-year-old boy looks at an iPhone screen display on May 21 in Bath, England.What To Know
In 2023, the FBI reported 48,000 extortion victims, a 22 percent jump from 2022, and many of the victims are Gen Zers.
Those born in the generation—from 1997 to 2012—were more likely to encounter extortion scams than older age groups. Roughly 58 percent of Gen Z and 52 percent of millennials had countered an extortion scam, whereas only 35 percent and 23 percent of Gen X and boomers had, according to the new Malwarebytes report.
Gen Z was also much more likely to actually fall for the scams, with 28 percent experiencing one. Roughly 13 percent of these scams were virtual kidnapping, while another 13 percent were attributed to deepfakes. Sextortion cases made up 11 percent.
"The woman asked for a small amount of money which I was reluctant to give, but she harassed me, so I decided to," one Gen Z survey respondent said. "Then she wanted to send me money to send to her friend. I accepted the money, but then alarms went off and I never sent it to her friend. I later learned about money mules. She then threatened to kill me because I had taken $1k when she only got $300. I then blocked her and called the police because I was scared."
Much of the higher risk for Gen Z and millennials comes down to how they use their digital devices. By sharing personal data with apps and websites, fraudsters are able to more easily target them.
"This isn't a Gen Z problem - it's a societal and political failure," Bryan Driscoll, HR consultant who specializes in generational differences, told Newsweek. "Parents, schools, tech companies, and policymakers have dropped the ball. We failed to teach boundaries, privacy, or skepticism. Instead, we taught them to post everything, trust algorithms, and chase validation in likes and follows."
Roughly 90 percent of mobile users shared deep levels of personal data with apps and websites, according to the survey. And younger users were the most permissive, with 91 percent of Gen Zers and millennials saying they grant apps access to their location, camera, photo library, and/or contacts compared to 80 percent for Gen X and older.
"A generation - and society - that normalizes surveillance, has a fractured sense of privacy, and is increasingly vulnerable to manipulation is doomed," Driscoll said. "If we don't build genuine protections - and it doesn't look like we're going to based on current federal policy proposals to explicitly ban any AI regulation for a decade - this will only get worse."
What People Are Saying
Alex Beene, financial literacy instructor for the University of Tennessee at Martin, told Newsweek: "There's a misconception that older Americans are most in danger when it comes to mobile scams. The reality is Gen Z finds themselves at the top of most rankings when it comes to falling for digital deception. While they may be younger and more tech savvy, Gen Z are also connected to their devices more frequently and may fall for scams based on impulse."
Driscoll also told Newsweek: "I'm not surprised Gen Z is the top target. It's the logical outcome of growing up with the world at your fingertips without appropriate digital literacy or regulation to match. The platforms Gen Z has known their entire lives are designed to manipulate behavior, harvest data, and reward oversharing. We've handed them the internet with no roadmap or guardrails and then act shocked when predators, scammers, and AI exploit that vulnerability."
Drew Powers, founder of Illinois-based Powers Financial Group, told Newsweek: "When you first hear this, it may seem counterintuitive given that Gen Z has grown up with the Internet, social media, and mobile communications, but it actually makes perfect sense. Baby Boomers and Generation X can vividly recall the days before the Internet, and therefore we have a built-in distrust around most anonymous electronic communications. Gen Z on the other hand, is far more comfortable with and trusting of these platforms."
What Happens Next
To lower the rate of younger Americans falling for extortion scams, an increased emphasis likely needs to be on teaching literacy for younger generations. Just because they grew up with technology does not mean they are more prepared against scams, Beene said.
"We need to quit assuming this group can navigate through digital waters because of their youth and experience with technology," Beene said. "If anything, the younger you are, the more you need to go through training on potential scams that could target your identity and money."
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Pew: Three quarters of Americans targeted weekly in online scams
Pew: Three quarters of Americans targeted weekly in online scams

UPI

time3 hours ago

  • UPI

Pew: Three quarters of Americans targeted weekly in online scams

July 31 (UPI) -- Nearly three quarters of U.S. adults experience some kind of online scam or cyber attack every week, data from the Pew Research Center showed Thursday. Most people receive scam calls, texts and emails at least weekly, the report said. Americans reported more than $16.6 billion in scam-related losses in 2024, the FBI said. Many U.S. financial institutions, retail corporations and federal officials are raising the issue, warning consumers about the attacks and working to educate the public about ways to avoid them and steps to take if they fall victim. "While Americans see older adults as more vulnerable to these crimes, significant portions of both older and younger adults have been scammed and targeted online," the report said. Nearly half of the respondents reported that online hackers made fraudulent charges on their credit or debit cards, the most common form of attack. More than a third reported purchasing an item online that never arrived or that was a counterfeit item for which they never received a refund. Nearly a third said personal information was hacked through a bank, social media, email or bank account, and a quarter of respondents said they received a scam text message or phone call that resulted in them providing personal information to a scammer. People between 18 and 29 were the most frequent victims of the scams, the report continued. Pew polled 9,397 adults between April 14 and 20.

FBI Detroit continues Jimmy Hoffa search after 50 years
FBI Detroit continues Jimmy Hoffa search after 50 years

UPI

time7 hours ago

  • UPI

FBI Detroit continues Jimmy Hoffa search after 50 years

The FBI resumed the search on June 18, 2013, for the body of Jimmy Hoffa, right, pictured here in this 1961 photo. File Photo by UPI July 31 (UPI) -- Former Teamsters Union President Jimmy Hoffa disappeared 50 years ago at age 62, but the FBI's Detroit Field Office continues seeking information for its ongoing investigation. The FBI investigates missing persons cases that might involve violations of federal law, such as kidnapping, organized crime and other criminal acts. "As the 50th anniversary of Mr. Hoffa's disappearance approaches, the FBI remains steadfast in its commitment to pursuing all credible leads," said Cheyvoryea Gibson, special agent in charge of the FBI Detroit Field Office, in a news release on Thursday. Anyone with information relating to the Hoffa case is encouraged to contact the FBI by calling 800-CALL-FBI or by submitting an online tip. Hoffa's conflict with Robert Kennedy While Hoffa was president of the International Brotherhood of Teamsters, he clashed with then-Attorney General Robert Kennedy, who for many years investigated the union's and Hoffa's alleged corruption and ties to organized crime. Several high-profile hearings elevated the general public's awareness of Hoffa, as well as Kennedy, who was assassinated while seeking the Democratic Party's nomination for president on June 6, 1968. Kennedy's investigations contributed to Hoffa eventually being convicted of bribing a grand jury member, along with a separate conviction for fraud, and going to federal prison in 1967. There is no known connection between Kennedy's assassin, Sirhan Sirhan, and Hoffa, the Teamsters or organized crime. Sirhan said he carried out the assassination due to Kennedy's support of Israel. Hoffa tried to regain union control Hoffa was last seen on July 30, 1975, at the Macchus Red Fox restaurant at 6676 Telegraph Road in the Detroit-area suburb of Bloomfield, Mich. He allegedly was there to meet with two organized crime leaders during his effort to regain control of the Teamsters Union. Self-admitted mob hitman Charles Allen in 1982 claimed Hoffa had assigned him to kill then-Teamsters Union President Frank Fitzsimmons. Allen claimed Hoffa told him to shoot and kill Fitzsimmons outside the Teamsters Union headquarters in Washington, D.C. He also claimed Hoffa ordered him to kill East Coast trucking leader Tony Provenzano and others who blocked Hoffa's path back to power within the Teamsters. Fitzsimmons was a highly placed Teamsters official while Hoffa was the union's president from 1957 to 1971. Fitzsimmons became the union's president when Hoffa was sentenced to federal prison in 1967 for jury tampering. Fitzsimmons also allegedly was more willing than Hoffa to continue loaning money from the Teamsters' Central States Pension Fund to those who were affiliated with organized crime. Such loans allegedly helped the mob to build and control several casinos in Las Vegas for many years. Effort to regain Teamsters presidency Hoffa's plan to kill Fitzsimmons unraveled when Hoffa's foster son, Chuckie O'Brien, warned Provenzano after a fallout, Allen claimed. O'Brien said Hoffa initially supported O'Brien's desire to seek election to a Teamsters post with its Detroit local, but Hoffa changed his mind. President Richard Nixon commuted Hoffa's sentence in 1971 with the condition that Hoffa cease his involvement in union activities. Hoffa reneged on the agreement and sought to regain his former office and oust Fitzsimmons, who was less popular among union members. Organized crime figures were concerned about Hoffa and viewed Fitzsimmons as someone they could control, so they ordered Hoffa's demise, Allen said. Allen claimed Provenzano and New Jersey mobster Salvatore Briguglio had Hoffa killed and his body disposed of by grinding it into small pieces and distributing the remains in a Florida swamp. Fitzsimmons died of cancer in 1981, and Briguglio was killed in an execution-style hit in New York City on March 21, 1978. Continued interest in disappearance Hoffa's disappearance has led to movies about his life and death, several documentaries and continued media interest. Many tips over the years have suggested Hoffa's body was buried under Giants Stadium in New Jersey, beneath several Detroit-area driveways and under a freeway overpass. Occasional tips have caused the FBI to investigate several homes and other locations, but none have turned up any additional evidence leading to the discovery of Hoffa's remains. At least two major motion pictures have been filmed about Hoffa and his disappearance. Actor Jack Nicholson portrayed Hoffa in a 1992 film titled "Hoffa," which details the union leader's organizing activities with the Teamsters and his eventual death and disappearance. Filmmaker Martin Scorsese in 2019 released "The Irishman," which attributes Hoffa's death to alleged mob hitman Frank Sheeran, who is played by Robert De Niro. Al Pacino played Hoffa, and Joe Pesci and Harvey Keitel played significant supporting roles in that film. "The Irishman" received 10 Academy Award nominations in 2020, including best picture, best director and best supporting actor for Pacino and Pesci, but the film did not win any Oscars.

‘Russiagate' was never anything more than Hillary Clinton's paid-for lies
‘Russiagate' was never anything more than Hillary Clinton's paid-for lies

New York Post

time7 hours ago

  • New York Post

‘Russiagate' was never anything more than Hillary Clinton's paid-for lies

Newly declassified intelligence files bring fresh, hard proof that Hillary Clinton's 2016 campaign completely cooked up Russiagate — a total lie that top intelligence officials nonetheless proceeded to amplify, and that all too many Democrats still believe. These memos from the first half of 2016 center on 'confidential conversations' between members of the Democratic National Committee and top staff at George Soros' Open Society Foundations — and the info is damning. 'Julie [sic] says it will be a long-term affair to demonize Putin and Trump,' runs one quote of July 25. 'Now it is good for a post-convention bounce. Later the FBI will put more oil into the fire.' That shows a clear expectation that government agencies would be colluding in the scheme — making it far more than just a campaign trick. Yet the campaign's plans included 'raising the theme of 'Putin's support for Trump' ' and 'subsequently steering public opinion toward the notion that it needs to equate' Russian influence campaigns with actual hacking of voting machines. Not only did the memos envision the FBI eventually helping out, that later happened under bureau boss Jim Comey and his No. 2, Andrew The memos also envisioned the FBI eventually supporting the phony scandal — as later actually happened under bureau boss Jim Comey and his No. 2, Andrew McCabe. Clinton OK'd the scheme to create a distraction from the scandal of her email abuses as secretary of state — and then-President Barack Obama and his top intelligence officials were all briefed on the campaign's intentions. Yet Obama, Comey, CIA chief John Brennan and others all seemed to forget about it when the planted 'information' began rolling in later in 2016, prompting the absurd Crossfire Hurricane investigation of Donald Trump's campaign and (eventually) the Mueller investigation that plagued Trump's first two years as president. Brennan and Comey even made the Steele Dossier — an utter fiction ordered up by the Clinton campaign — part of the official, post-election 'intelligence finding' that cherry-picked info to claim that Russia had worked to elect Trump. Clinton's scheme was a dirty trick (that failed to turn the 2016 election for her), but it was Obama & Co. who truly betrayed the American people here. Obama actively spread the lie in his final days in office, telling a pack of progressive journalists that 'the Russia thing is a problem,' and suggesting the new prez could have a 'relationship with a foreign entity' that 'might shade' policy. Then came the endless string of New York Times and Washington Post stories citing anonymous 'current and former intelligence officials' — completely fake news that consumed the nation's capital in Trump-Russia hysteria. It's all now been 100% debunked, but only after kneecapping a presidency — and with all too many Americans failing to realize even now that it was nothing but lies from start to finish. Obama, Brennan and the rest pulled off the greatest smear campaign in American history: For shame.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store