Everyone knows to look for phony emails – they can appear in your email inbox or even at work. Scammers can easily make messages that appear to come from anywhere, like your boss’s email account or a close family member. But what about phone calls and voicemail? Scammers can use new AI technology to mimic the voice of someone you know and create a phone call or voicemail recording. This “voice cloning” technology has recently advanced, and anyone with the right software can clone a voice from a very small audio sample.
How the scam works
At work, you get a voicemail from your boss. They instruct you to wire thousands of dollars to a vendor for a rush project. The request is out of the blue. But it’s the boss’s orders, so you make the transfer. A few hours later, you see your boss and confirm that you sent the payment. But there’s one big problem; your manager has no idea what you are talking about! It turns out that the message was fake.
At home, you may receive a phone call or voicemail from a family member in an urgent situation like an accident or a medical emergency. They provide convincing details and ask for money immediately via a digital wallet payment app like Venmo or PayPal. You find out later that the story wasn’t true, and your money is gone.
A consumer recently shared on Scam Tracker, “Received call on 1-26-24 I thought it was my daughter-in-law she said Hi mom calling to say she was pulled over driving and has a broken nose and is now being. She was frantic to have me call the lawyer right away. She asked me 3 times if I wrote the name & number down. I said yes. She said she had to go right now as they are taking her. Her voice sounded just like my daughter-in-law.”
With the US now amid the 2024 election season, scammers may use the technology to mimic candidates’ voices to sway voters or potentially drum up “donations.”
How to avoid similar scams:
Resist the urge to act immediately. No matter how convincing a phone call or voicemail may sound, hang up or close the message if something doesn’t feel right. Call the person who claimed to have called you directly with the phone number you have saved for them. Don’t call back the number provided by the caller or caller ID. Ask questions that would be hard for an impostor to answer correctly.
Don’t send money if you’re in doubt. If the caller urgently asks you to send money via a digital wallet payment app or a gift card, that may be a red flag for a scam. If you wire money to someone and later realize it’s a fraud, the police must be alerted.
Secure your accounts. Whether at work or home, set up multifactor authentication for email logins and other changes in email settings. At work, verify changes in information about customers, employees, or vendors.
At work, train your staff. Create a secure culture at your office by training employees in internet security. Make it a policy to confirm all change and payment requests before transferring. Don’t rely on email or voicemail.
If you’ve been the victim of a scam, please report it at BBB.org/ScamTracker. Your report can help expose scammers’ tactics and prevent others from having a similar experience.
May 5 - May 11This Week in Indiana History |
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Indiana Capitol Tour Office |
Planning a party? If you need to rent chairs, decorations, a bouncy house, or any other supplies, take extra caution when searching for rentals. BBB Scam Tracker continues to receive reports of party hosts being tricked by rentals that don’t materialize. Before planning your next party, get to know this scam to avoid being conned.
How the scam works
You are planning a party and need to rent supplies. You do a web or social media search and find a few options. For example, you may find a legitimate website with a convenient online booking system. Or you might message someone through a social media account that seems professional.
Either way, the “vendor” promises to reserve your rental for the date you need it – if you pay a deposit first. They may also require you to fill out a contact form with your personal details. The date of your party arrives, and your rental tent, furniture, or other supplies don’t arrive.
At this point, the “vendor” may tell you they’ve had an emergency and can’t deliver on their promise. However, the scammers will disappear completely when you ask for your money back. Other times, you can’t contact the rental company at all. For example, if you originally contacted the vendor on social media, they may have blocked you or deleted their account. One consumer reported this experience to BBB Scam Tracker: “I was looking for an inflatable for my son’s birthday and I searched up on Facebook and that [company name redacted] was sponsored. I messaged them and they had good reviews and then he told me to Zelle his a downpayment of $150 and then the other $150 I will send it later and so I thought it was legit. Then he told me to send him a screenshot that I sent the money and then he blocked me.”
How to avoid similar scams
Do your research before you rent. Take a good look at the rental company’s website and ensure it has accurate contact information. Then, read consumer reviews about the company on third-party websites, such as BBB.org. Also, search the business name plus the word “scam” to ensure you don’t find any reports of fraudulent business dealings. You can also look up the business on BBB Scam Tracker to see if any recent reports have been filed by other consumers.
Think twice when renting from listings only advertised on social media. Take caution if you find party rentals on social media but cannot find the company’s website or confirm their contact information anywhere else. If the rental business only contacts you and facilitates the rental transaction through social media and refuses to talk on the phone or in person, that’s another red flag.
Be wary of people who contact you on messaging apps. Legitimate businesses may use messaging apps to interact with you, but it’s unlikely they will initiate a conversation and contact you out of the blue this way. Again, even if you speak with a business through a messaging app or social media, ensure they have a website and working contact information.
Be careful with your personal details. You may need to fill out a contract with personal information, but ensure you are dealing with a legitimate, professional company first before handing over sensitive personal and financial information.
Review your contract. It’s common to have a contract in place when you order rentals from a company. Review your contract carefully and ensure that your delivery date and time are accurate, as well as the final cost and payment details. Check to ensure the contract doesn’t outline any phony fees or other extra costs you weren’t anticipating. Save a copy of the contract that is signed and dated by both you and the company.
Consider how the company is asking you to provide payment. Oftentimes, scammers will ask you to provide payment through a digital wallet app or a wire transfer. Don’t ever hand over money or your payment information to a stranger or someone you haven’t met.
If you do pay, remember that it’s much easier to dispute fraudulent charges using your credit card. If you pay with a debit card, digital wallet, or cash, you may not get your money back if you find out you were scammed. If the cost of the rental downpayment seems too high, do more research and get quotes from other rental companies.
If you spot a party rental scam or any other kind of scam, report it to BBB.org/ScamTracker to help build consumer awareness.
The John Hay Center is offering campsites for viewing the total solar eclipse from Friday, Apr. 5 through Monday, Apr.8.
Campsite size will be 20-feet by 20-feet, with water and restrooms available.
Primitive tent camping is $120 for entire weekend. Mobile camper sites are $225 for the weekend. Both sites include camping from Friday 5 p.m. through Monday 4 p.m. Food will be available on site.
S’mores and a weenie roast will be offered on Sunday, Apr. 7 The cost is $5.
Call 812-883-6495 for reservations.
By: Jerry Curry, Staff Writer
Opening on Feb 16, India: South Asian Paintings from the San Diego Museum of Art is the Speed Art Museum’s first exhibition of South Asian art to be hosted by the Speed in its nearly 100-year institutional history.
This marquee exhibition comprises a pair of thematic exhibitions and is drawn from The Edwin Binney 3rd Collection, now housed at the San Diego Museum of Art. It is one of the finest and most comprehensive collections of South Asian paintings outside of modern-day Pakistan and India.
Intended to be encyclopedic in nature, the more than 1,400-piece collection includes paintings made for the Mughal, Deccani, Rajasthani and Parahi courts. The collection was assembled by Binney, an heir to the Crayola fortune, who was also interested in Persian painting, Ottoman and other Islamic art, ballet prints and theater books.
Replete with colorful and exquisitely painted portraits and manuscript illuminations reflecting the rich and diverse artistic traditions of South Asia over four centuries, the exhibition promises to dazzle visitors. The exhibition runs through May 12.
“This is an extraordinary chance to present a historical overview of South Asian life, culture and art, and more importantly, will allow us to bring related programming, cinema screenings and learning opportunities about this rich cultural heritage to the Kentuckiana region,” said Erika Holmquist-Wall, Chief Curator of the Speed Art Museum.
“Museums are asked to be in touch with the communities in which they serve and to share those histories and cultural heritage. The Speed does not have this area represented in our own collections and given how large our South Asian community is, it’s essential and important that we meet the needs of our community and region and that the Speed shows all kinds of art,” said Holmquist-Wall.
India is intentionally divided into two themed sections. The first, The Throne, The Chase, and The Heart, introduces Indian rulers and elites through 46 exquisite portraits and paintings of courtly pastimes. Several of the works were intended for courtly albums, while some were executed on a larger scale. In both subject matter and technique, they exhibit the splendor, power, and culture of Islamic and other courts in India during the 16th-19th centuries. They also represent the diverse artistic traditions – Hindu, Persianate, and Islamic – cultivated in the royal kitabkhana, or workshop, which were often disseminated to other courts throughout and beyond South Asia. Works will be presented in three sections: (1) “The Throne” (2) “The Chase” and (3) “The Heart,” exploring images of power and authority, the royal hunt and courtly love.
The second section, Elephant in the Room, explores the long-revered role of the elephant in South Asian oral and visual traditions, the legacy of which also survives in courtly painting. Inspired by this inherent reverence for the elephant, an appreciation rooted in India’s rich literary traditions and folklore, artists at the courts of Muslim and Hindu rulers produced splendid paintings and studies of elephants, many of which were admired in albums, and others conceived as independent compositions or as designs for transfer to other media. All share a cultural affinity for the simultaneously massive yet graceful, powerful but noble elephant, its majesty captured by the empathetic hand of the artist. The second theme within the exhibition presents the subject in four sections: (1) “Folklore and Elephants in Indian Literature” (2) “Elephants in Action” (3) “Powerful Processions” and (4) “Portraits and Preservation.”
As Speed curators seek to diversify its representation of art history in the museum, this large-scale exhibition brings one of the richest and most diverse perspectives in highlighting this particular culture and its traditions. “This is one of the largest collections of historical South Asian art in North America and it brings us the best of the best,” said Kim Spence, Senior Director of Collections and Curator of Works on Paper.
Prior to its arrival in Louisville, the exhibition was shown at CentroCentro de Cibeles in Madrid, Spain. After its 3-month engagement at the Speed, it will return to the San Diego Museum of Art (SDMA) where the works will rest. “These works on paper are incredibly light sensitive and they literally have to be housed in the dark for a while,” said Spence.
The collections of the Harvard-educated Binney came to the SDMA as a bequest after his death in 1986. According to Dr. Ladan Akbarnia, SDMA’s Curator of South Asian and Islamic Art, Binney collected many areas of art given his wide-ranging interests. “As a resident of San Diego, he also became a Trustee of the San Diego Museum of Art and was so engaged with research and building an encyclopedic collection of painting that he was even given his own office in the basement of the museum’s library, which now holds his archives,” said Akbarnia.
Roxana Velasquez, the SDMA’s Executive Director, said only a few museums in the world possess a collection of this magnitude. “It is a great honor that Edwin Binney 3rd entrusted this legacy to the San Diego Museum of Art, and we are delighted to share its reach with the Speed Art Museum in Kentucky,” she said.
Lopa Mehrotra, chair of the Speed’s Board of Trustees, championed this first-ever exhibition. Last year, Mehrotra formed a special Advisory Committee of individuals from the local Indian and Pakistani communities to discuss its important themes and to help guide the museum in connecting the exhibition with modern day culture.
“We are grateful for the enthusiasm and support of the Advisory Committee. We have such a vibrant South Asian community in Louisville, and many don’t realize that there’s an Indian and Pakistani cultural heritage here that goes back several generations,” said Mehrotra. “These generous volunteers have shared their cultural knowledge to ensure that the Speed’s programming and events authentically represent both modern and classical South Asia. This is really a celebration of our local Indian and Pakistani communities, and our advisors have provided crucial connections to local organizations and businesses for outreach and partnership.”
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