AI Grandma Daisy Will Scam the Phone Scammers For You
Daisy is designed to get back at a thing we all hate, telemarketing scammers who call all day and night trying to trick us into giving all kinds of personal information or money. Most of us have grown accustomed to the rouse and either hang up, express our anger at them, or don’t answer the phone.
A few years ago I got a call from someone who wanted to access my computer because there was an issue. I had time to kill and ended up tagging them along for a long time. Once they realized that I was on to them, they screamed expletives and hung up, which was very satisfying.
Daisy to the Rescue
Now there’s Daisy to take care of that for all of us. Daisy is a fantastically awesome artificial intelligence grandmother designed to frustrate the tele-scammers by doing the same thing I did, keeping them on the phone for as long as possible.
Daisy was launched in early November 2024 by a phone company in the United Kingdom, Virgin Media O2. She simply wastes a scammer’s time and has kept some of them on the line, preventing them from victimizing others, for over 30 minutes.
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We all know that a lot of fraud is aimed at the elderly. That’s why the best artificial victim is an AI chatbot old lady who sounds like everyone’s grandmother. Daisy’s creators sampled several hours of recorded conversations with an actual human grandmother to perfect AI Daisy.
AI granny doesn’t block calls, however, she has stored tons of phone numbers that are on telemarketing and scammer lists. According to CBS news, Virgin Media O2 “used a tactic called number seeding to get Daisy’s phone number added to a list of online “mugs lists.” These are “lists used by scammers targeting U.K. consumers.”
When an old lady chatbot receives a call she may talk about her grandchildren, something happening in her garden, or even share fake account numbers.
According to several reports, this is only the beginning of helping scammers have a long and unsuccessful day. This can lead to making it less desirable to choose this particular specialized scam profession.
According to BusinessWire, more than one in five Americans were scammed out of billions of dollars last year. Let’s hope that Daisy doesn’t retire, and brings on some friends to help.