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UN Says Asian Scam Call Center Epidemic Expanding Globally Amid Political Heat (theregister.com) 35

The UN warns that scam call centers, once concentrated in Southeast Asia, are rapidly expanding worldwide like a "cancer" as organized crime groups exploit weak governance in regions like Africa, South America, the Pacific Islands, and parts of Europe. The Register reports: Previous UN reports flagged growing activity in regions like South America and the Middle East. The latest update expands that scope, citing overseas crackdowns and evidence of scam operations tied to Southeast Asian crime syndicates in Africa, South Asia, select Pacific islands, and links to related criminal services -- such as laundering and recruitment -- as far as Europe, North America, and beyond. These spillover sites, as the UN calls them, allow Asian OCGs to expand their pool of victims by hiring/trafficking locals with different language skills and "dramatically scale up profits," according to the UN's latest report [PDF].

"We are seeing a global expansion of East and Southeast Asian organized crime groups," said Benedikt Hofmann, acting regional representative for Southeast Asia and the Pacific at the UN's Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC). "This reflects both a natural expansion as the industry grows and seeks new ways and places to do business, but also a hedging strategy against future risks should disruption continue and intensify in the region." Previously, the hotspots for this type of activity have been in places like Myanmar, Cambodia, the Philippines, and Laos since 2021 when the UN and Interpol started tracking the phenomenon.

"It spreads like a cancer," Hofmann added. "Authorities treat it in one area, but the roots never disappear; they simply migrate. This has resulted in a situation in which the region has essentially become an interconnected ecosystem, driven by sophisticated syndicates freely exploiting vulnerabilities, jeopardizing state sovereignty, and distorting and corrupting policy-making processes and other government systems and institutions." The UN said these scam gangs typically relocate to jurisdictions with weak governance, allowing them to expand operations -- and rake in between $27.4 and $36.5 billion annually, according to estimates based on labour force size and average haul per scammer.

UN Says Asian Scam Call Center Epidemic Expanding Globally Amid Political Heat

Comments Filter:
  • Easy to thwart (Score:3, Informative)

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday April 22, 2025 @09:07PM (#65324641)
    Simply do not answer the phone, ever, unless it's someone you know. Anyone else can leave a voicemail or send an e-mail.
    • If you have a kid under 18, unknown caller from local area code could be an emergency from their school, daycare, or a random person.

      Now what I have taken to is just immediately hanging up on unknowns the first time they call. If it is a legitimate real human, I hope they will think it was a phone glitch and call back right away.

    • Caller ID spoofing exploits your ignorance.
      • by vbdasc ( 146051 )

        Then a better advice. Don't pick the phone for anyone. Don't use such an insecure system.

  • Organized Crime (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Local ID10T ( 790134 ) <ID10T.L.USER@gmail.com> on Tuesday April 22, 2025 @09:11PM (#65324653) Homepage

    "Authorities treat it in one area, but the roots never disappear; they simply migrate. This has resulted in a situation in which the region has essentially become an interconnected ecosystem, driven by sophisticated syndicates freely exploiting vulnerabilities, jeopardizing state sovereignty, and distorting and corrupting policy-making processes and other government systems and institutions."

    They have discovered modern organized crime. It all works like this -not just phone scams.

  • Respond by trolling and/or trying to sell some shitcoin. Or fall in love. Do not click links. These slaves need some humor in their lives.
      • Brilliant; this guy is much better at this game than I am.

        I don't get the texts anymore for some reason; I think my number is on a "do not call" list used by these outfits. Before that, I got a lot of photos from "Chinese women". At one point, a "Japanese woman" and I fell in love at first text. I typically immediately require that they call me "sir" to test the response, and then engage in depth. They either don't get the jokes or don't care or I don't know how to explain it, but they persist, potential
        • Those are still great stories, man! I don't have anything as elaborate :(

          I was once contacted randomly by a hot looking girl on Whattsapp, she introduced herself as a new overseas student (Asian) and apologized for her broken English, but she needed directions to a department at the local university. So far so good, I told her to contact reception.

          She thanked me and immediately said I was hot (I don't have pictures of myself) and do I want to go for a drink? So I say no to a few more propositions until s

          • Thanks! Forgot to mention that I believe sunk cost fallacy may apply here, whether time or emotion or money or whatever else committed. I dislike both phrases as cliche/vague/broadly applied, and with the second being a false construct, but gaslighting/boiled frog.
    • by gweihir ( 88907 )

      Vote better. This is a solved problem. But it requires political will to implement the solution.

    • by antdude ( 79039 )

      Respond? Then, they know your contact is valid and sell/give to other spammers. :(

      • They're going to keep trying all numbers regardless of responses. For texts, responding seems to have removed me from their lists. Email is a different thing; I would never respond, though one could create throwaway addresses and spam them back and peruse that way, I guess.
  • by mdpowell ( 256664 ) on Tuesday April 22, 2025 @09:25PM (#65324667)

    Free phone calls are a scourge on civilization and civilized behavior. It should cost $0.05 complete a call to a USA phone number. The cost would put the scammers out of business immediately.

    $0.05 per call would be no real burden on any legitimate use. (And no, I'm not sympathetic to the "legitimate" political callers, surveys, "legitimate" sales, or "charities.")

    • by Tablizer ( 95088 )

      Agreed! And use that nickle to fund hunting scammers. Maybe require all consumer phone accounts to get say 10 free calls a month.

    • by gweihir ( 88907 ) on Wednesday April 23, 2025 @05:14AM (#65325125)

      The proven (elsewhere) solution is actually really simple: Make telco providers responsible for filtereing these sources fast and impose nasty fines if they do not. That does collide with political and corporate greed in the US though and hence will not happen anytime soon.

      Know how many scam call or unsolicited commercial calls I got in the last 20 years? Two. One was domestic and the call-center got raided and everybody arrested a few days later.

  • by RitchCraft ( 6454710 ) on Tuesday April 22, 2025 @09:33PM (#65324675)

    Treat it like an epidemic and burn everything to the ground when discovered including those running the scams.

  • Don't they need more and more victims to do that?

    You would think there would be less and less people willing to do *anything* someone tells them to do over the internet or phone, especially that they don't know.

    That and there are all those "this is a scam!" PSAs from all kinds of people in every media.

    Where are they getting there increase in victims?

    • There is unfortunately a nearly unlimited supply of people who are in desperate need. Refugees from various wars or persecuted minorities, for example. Small subsistence farmers who have lost their livelihoods to changing climate and soon people made redundant by LLMs (that probably cannot do their jobs but replace them anyway.
    • by gweihir ( 88907 )

      Thre is a sucker born every minute...

      This is, unfortunately, the literal root of the problem. That and a political class that is corrupt and unwilling to address the problem and voters that have no clue what is actually possible once you eleminate that corruption. Instead, in the US, they vote more corruprtion...

  • Soon there will be no need for these call centers. LLMs, quality TTS, and image generators can take care of every part of the scam, saving these poor wretches from slavery in scam call centers.

  • Two in 20 years. Last one about 10 years ago. Telcos here are obliged to filter the srouces of these. Failure to filter results in quite unpleasant fines. Do I pay more for telecomunication services than I would in the US? No.

    This is a problem of greed and politics.

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