Telephone scams can be devastating, but technology is evolving to warn consumers away from a fraud even while the scammer is still on the phone trying to trick you out of your money. On Tuesday, at Google I/O 2024, the company's annual developers conference, Google announced upcoming scam-detection tools coming to Android phones that will use Google's artificial intelligence tool Gemini to detect a fraud and warn you about it in real-time.
Once Google's AI detects that the conversation includes suspicious wording, an alert pops up on the phone to warn of a possible scam.
The example displayed at the event was a red pop-up window with text that read, "Likely scam: Banks will never ask you to move your money to keep it safe," and provided a button to end the call, as well as one to continue. An alert noise was also heard to tell the phone user the scam alert had popped up.
That would seem to reveal that Google's AI is listening to your phone calls, which might unnerve some people. A company representative said all details would stay private on your device. No official date was given for the new feature, which is still being tested.
Watch on TikTok: See the Scam-Call Alert Demonstration From Google I/O
More from Google I/O 2024
Microsoft announced a similar feature in February, calling its version Azure Operator Call Protection, and making it an option for mobile carriers to offer to their subscribers.
Scam calls continue to plague everyone who uses a phone. A study from voice security platform Hiya reported that the average phone gets about 14 spam calls per month. Some calls even use AI to fake celebrity voices, such as those of singer Taylor Swift or President Joe Biden. The Federal Communications Commission ruled in February that such calls are illegal, giving states a new way to go after the scammers.


