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In the last month, about a dozen authors wrote to Forum saying they’d been messaged by a fraudster claiming to be Mina Kim. In exchange for a “small fee,” they’d be invited to talk about their book on the show. This is a new kind of impersonation scam targeting the wider publishing industry, and like online dating schemes, they’re using flattery and promises of publicity to con the authors into sending money. We look at why authors are being targeted, just how deep this publishing scam goes, and how AI is superpowering online scams.
Guests:
Lauren Goode, senior correspondent covering Silicon Valley, Wired
Dan Barry, senior writer, The New York Times
Julian Sancton, senior features editor, The Hollywood Reporter
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
By KQED4.3
695695 ratings
In the last month, about a dozen authors wrote to Forum saying they’d been messaged by a fraudster claiming to be Mina Kim. In exchange for a “small fee,” they’d be invited to talk about their book on the show. This is a new kind of impersonation scam targeting the wider publishing industry, and like online dating schemes, they’re using flattery and promises of publicity to con the authors into sending money. We look at why authors are being targeted, just how deep this publishing scam goes, and how AI is superpowering online scams.
Guests:
Lauren Goode, senior correspondent covering Silicon Valley, Wired
Dan Barry, senior writer, The New York Times
Julian Sancton, senior features editor, The Hollywood Reporter
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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