Big Tech can stop scams. They just don’t (Lock and Code S07E08)
好的,我现在需要帮用户总结一篇文章,控制在100字以内。首先,我得仔细阅读文章内容,抓住主要观点。 文章主要讨论老年人被骗后被指责的现象,指出这种现象源于年龄歧视和否认。接着提到数据反驳了这一观点,年轻人在某些骗局中的受害者比例更高。同时,文章指出网络诈骗是全球最常见的有组织犯罪之一,损失金额巨大。最后提到现有的防范措施不够有效,技术公司虽然有能力阻止诈骗,但缺乏动力。 接下来,我需要将这些要点浓缩成简洁的句子。确保涵盖老年人被指责、数据反驳、网络诈骗普遍、防范措施不足以及技术公司的角色这几个方面。 然后检查字数,确保不超过100字。可能需要调整句子结构,去掉不必要的细节。 最后,通读一遍,确保内容准确且流畅。 </think> 文章探讨了老年人被骗后常被指责的现象,并指出这种现象源于年龄歧视和否认。数据显示年轻人在某些骗局中更容易受骗。网络诈骗已成为全球最常见的有组织犯罪之一,损失金额巨大。尽管有防范措施,但技术公司因利益冲突缺乏动力阻止诈骗。 2026-4-20 14:16:12 Author: www.malwarebytes.com(查看原文) 阅读量:18 收藏

This week on the Lock and Code podcast…

A dreadful thing happens far too often whenever an older adult falls for a scam: They get blamed for it. Not the scammers who lied and cheated their victim out of money. Not law enforcement for failing to recover funds. Not even the Big Tech companies that could have the most important role in protecting people online—and which, it turns out, knowingly bring in revenue every year from fraud.

Instead, it is the older adults themselves whose stories are often shirked aside because of a mix of ageism and denial. Allegedly left behind by technology, only an octogenarian would hand their password over in a phishing scheme, or open an email attachment from a stranger, or send money to a fake charity online. Everyone else, everyone else believes, is too savvy for the same.

The data disagrees.

When Malwarebytes studied this last year, it found that, depending on the type of scam—especially for things like “sextortion”—younger individuals were far more likely to report falling victim. Further, digging into data from the US Federal Trade Commission revealed entirely separate patterns. For example, while Americans between the ages of 80 and 89 reported the highest median loss due to fraud in 2024, they also made up the smallest share of their population to report a loss at all. And in 2025, that same group represented the smallest share of reported identity theft, a crime far more likely to be reported by people between 30 and 39.

Questions about who reports what crimes at what rate are valid to explore, but it’s important to see the big picture: Americans lost at least $15.9 billion to fraud last year. Protecting older adults is actually about protecting everyone, and that’s because modern scams don’t arrive only where people over 70 spend time. They arrive where we all are, which is online. They come through endless text messages, they slide into social media DMs, and they prey on things any of us can be—a widow, a divorcee, or simply a lonely person.

According to Marti DeLiema, Assistant Professor at the University of Minnesota’s School of Social Work, scams and fraud are now the most common form of organized crime globally, rivaling weapons trafficking, drug trafficking, human trafficking, and sex trafficking. In 2024 alone, she said, the FTC estimated that older adults in the US had as much as $81.5 billion stolen from them. And the tools meant to fight back—broad consumer awareness campaigns, embedded warning messages at the point of transaction, the training of bank tellers and retail clerks—are nowhere near keeping pace.

So what actually works? And who, if anyone, is doing the work?

Today, on the Lock and Code podcast with host David Ruiz, we speak with DeLiema about who is really susceptible to financial fraud, why victims often describe a scam as a form of betrayal trauma, and why the companies best positioned to stop scam messages from reaching consumers may be the ones least motivated to do so.

“This is not a technical capability problem at all. This is a conflict of incentives.”

Tune in today to listen to the full conversation.

Show notes and credits:

Intro Music: “Spellbound” by Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 4.0 License
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
Outro Music: “Good God” by Wowa (unminus.com)


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文章来源: https://www.malwarebytes.com/blog/podcast/2026/04/big-tech-can-stop-scams-they-just-dont-lock-and-code-s07e08
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