Love, Lies, and Language Models: Investigating AI's Role in Romance-Baiting Scams

Gilad Gressel and Rahul Pankajakshan, Center for Cybersecurity Systems & Networks, Amrita Vishwa Vidyapeetham, Amritapuri; Shir Rozenfeld, Ben Gurion University of the Negev; Ling Li, Ca' Foscari University of Venice; Ivan Franceschini, University of Melbourne; Krishnashree Achuthan, Center for Cybersecurity Systems & Networks, Amrita Vishwa Vidyapeetham, Amritapuri; Yisroel Mirsky, Ben Gurion University of the Negev

Romance-baiting scams have become a major source of financial and emotional harm worldwide. These operations are run by organized crime syndicates that traffic thousands of people into forced labor, requiring them to build emotional intimacy with victims over weeks of text conversations before pressuring them into fraudulent cryptocurrency investments. Because the scams are inherently text-based, they raise urgent questions about the role of Large Language Models (LLMs) in both current and future automation.

We investigate this intersection by interviewing 145 insiders and 5 scam victims, performing a blinded long-term conversation study comparing LLM scam agents to human operators, and executing an evaluation of commercial safety filters. Our findings show that LLMs are already widely deployed within scam organizations, with 87% of scam labor consisting of systematized conversational tasks readily susceptible to automation. In a week-long study, an LLM agent not only elicited greater trust from study participants (p=0.007) but also achieved higher compliance with requests than human operators (46% vs. 18% for humans). Meanwhile, popular safety filters detected 0.0% of romance baiting dialogues. Together, these results suggest that romance-baiting scams may be amenable to full-scale LLM automation, while existing defenses remain inadequate to prevent their expansion.

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