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Home Technology & Industry AI

The New Face of Online Scams: Why Younger Generations Are Now Prime Targets

By Megan Squire, Threat Intelligence Researcher, F-Secure

SVJ Thought Leader by SVJ Thought Leader
October 28, 2025
in AI, Cybersecurity
0
The New Face of Online Scams: Why Younger Generations Are Now Prime Targets

The Myth of the “Naïve Senior”

For years, the archetype of a scam victim was an elderly person falling for an email hoax or a too-good-to-be-true lottery win. But that image is outdated. According to F-Secure’s 2025 Scam Intelligence & Impacts Report, people between the ages of 18 and 34 are now more than twice as likely to be targeted successfully by online scams compared to older adults.

This shift isn’t because younger generations are less intelligent or more gullible, it’s because scams themselves have evolved. They’ve adapted to exploit new cultural realities: economic pressure, job insecurity, and the constant digital noise that makes everyone just a little more distracted than they should be.

AI-Powered Deception Meets Economic Desperation

In 2025, scams are no longer one-off phishing attempts written in broken English. They’re industrialized, AI-driven operations capable of mimicking corporate HR departments, gig-economy recruiters, and even familiar brands with startling precision.

The rise of AI-generated deepfakes, cloned voices, and realistic chatbots means that scammers can craft messages that feel personal, timely, and legitimate. Combine that with economic anxiety, particularly among younger workers facing a difficult job market and you have the perfect storm.

Job-related scams are an especially cruel example. Listings on reputable job boards or social media platforms often turn out to be fakes designed to harvest personal data, request “start-up fees,” or trick applicants into fraudulent work-from-home schemes. In the U.S., where entry-level job numbers remain stubbornly low, this form of exploitation preys on hope and hustle.

Confidence as a Risk Factor

F-Secure’s data paints a clear picture of misplaced confidence. Nearly 70% of respondents worldwide believe they can spot a scam, yet 43% fell victim in the past year. That gap between perception and reality is especially wide among younger adults, who grew up online and assume digital fluency equates to digital safety.

But comfort with technology can actually dull skepticism. Younger consumers are used to instant verification: one-click logins, autofilled forms, and algorithmic recommendations. When a scam arrives through the same channels they use every day, it blends seamlessly into the background of routine.

In behavioral terms, the issue is more about cognitive overload than ignorance. Scammers know their targets are multitasking, job-searching, and constantly connected, so they weaponize speed, familiarity, and social validation to slip through defenses.

Scams as a Mirror of Society

Online fraud reflects broader social dynamics. Older adults were once the easiest targets because they were new to digital life. Now, younger adults dominate online spaces, making them the most visible and therefore the most vulnerable.

Scammers are opportunistic. They’ll exploit whatever context offers the best chance of success. For college students and early-career professionals, that might mean impersonating recruiters or freelance platforms. For parents, it could be child-care or shopping scams. For seniors, it may still be romance or tech-support schemes.

The Scam Intelligence & Impacts Report also calls this out directly: scams evolve alongside technology and human behavior. The patterns we see today are not accidents, they’re the natural outcome of a hyperconnected world where trust and convenience often outweigh caution.

The Emotional Toll No One Talks About

Perhaps the most underreported aspect of modern scams is the emotional fallout. F-Secure’s research found that only 7% of scams are ever reported, largely due to embarrassment or fear of judgment.

Younger victims, in particular, face an added layer of stigma. They feel they should have known better. They’re digital natives, after all. But when scammers use AI to replicate real people, legitimate job sites, and even verified accounts, “knowing better” is no longer enough.

The shame-to-silence pipeline keeps these crimes invisible and that invisibility helps them thrive. Every unreported incident teaches scammers that their methods work.

The Role of AI: Scaling the Con

Artificial intelligence is the backbone of today’s scam economy. From writing personalized phishing messages to cloning corporate websites in seconds, AI tools are lowering the barrier to entry for high-quality deception.

F-Secure’s team has observed AI-generated scam templates that adapt in real time to a victim’s responses, making them far more convincing than static scripts. Some scams even use generative voice technology to impersonate loved ones or supervisors, preying on emotional instinct and sidestepping a victim’s normal skeptical response.

Education, Embedded Protection Or Both?

So, how do we fight back? Education remains foundational. Helping people recognize emotional triggers, like urgency, fear, and excitement, is critical. Digital literacy shouldn’t end with “don’t click suspicious links” and “look for strange spellings.” Awareness must extend to understanding how AI can fabricate nearly everything online.

But individual vigilance isn’t enough. There needs to be systemic resilience. That means embedding protective technologies into the digital services people already use: telecoms, banks, job boards, and email providers. When scam detection and prevention are baked into infrastructure, users don’t have to carry the full burden alone.

This is a “yes, and” scenario. We need smarter tools and smarter people. We need software that can flag anomalies, and education that builds instinct. The goal isn’t to make humans perfect, it’s to make scams unprofitable.

Rebuilding Digital Trust

Ultimately, the story of modern scams is a story about trust. Scams make us question how trust was broken online and how it can be rebuilt. Younger generations have inherited a digital world that prioritizes speed over scrutiny, and virality over verification. Rebuilding trust will be tough.

But slowing down, double-checking, and verifying are signs of digital maturity, not paranoia.

If there’s a silver lining, it’s that awareness is growing. AI, automation, analytics are the same technologies that enable scams, and they can also empower defense. The challenge will be for technologists, educators, and policymakers to align those tools with human behavior.

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