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Is Your Bank Login at Risk? How Chatbots May Be Guiding Users to Phishing Scams

Your new best friend —AI chatbots are a gateway for scammers to fool you in a jiff.

 


Cybersecurity researchers have uncovered a troubling risk tied to how popular AI chatbots answer basic questions. When asked where to log in to well-known websites, some of these tools may unintentionally direct users to the wrong places, putting their private information at risk.

Phishing is one of the oldest and most dangerous tricks in the cybercrime world. It usually involves fake websites that look almost identical to real ones. People often get an email or message that appears to be from a trusted company, like a bank or online store. These messages contain links that lead to scam pages. If you enter your username and password on one of these fake sites, the scammer gets full access to your account.

Now, a team from the cybersecurity company Netcraft has found that even large language models or LLMs, like the ones behind some popular AI chatbots, may be helping scammers without meaning to. In their study, they tested how accurately an AI chatbot could provide login links for 50 well-known companies across industries such as finance, retail, technology, and utilities.

The results were surprising. The chatbot gave the correct web address only 66% of the time. In about 29% of cases, the links led to inactive or suspended pages. In 5% of cases, they sent users to a completely different website that had nothing to do with the original question.

So how does this help scammers? Cybercriminals can purchase these unclaimed or inactive domain names, the incorrect ones suggested by the AI, and turn them into realistic phishing pages. If people click on them, thinking they’re going to the right site, they may unknowingly hand over sensitive information like their bank login or credit card details.

In one example observed by Netcraft, an AI-powered search tool redirected users who asked about a U.S. bank login to a fake copy of the bank’s website. The real link was shown further down the results, increasing the risk of someone clicking on the wrong one.

Experts also noted that smaller companies, such as regional banks and mid-sized fintech platforms, were more likely to be affected than global giants like Apple or Google. These smaller businesses may not have the same resources to secure their digital presence or respond quickly when problems arise.

The researchers explained that this problem doesn't mean the AI tools are malicious. However, these models generate answers based on patterns, not verified sources and that can lead to outdated or incorrect responses.

The report serves as a strong reminder: AI is powerful, but it is not perfect. Until improvements are made, users should avoid relying on AI-generated links for sensitive tasks. When in doubt, type the website address directly into your browser or use a trusted bookmark.

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Artificial Intelligence

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phishing

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