FCC Chairwoman Jessica Rosenworcel has proposed new rules requiring customer service call centers to disclose their locations. The goal is to bring jobs back to the U.S.
The bigger concern lies beyond customer service. A growing wave of scams now uses artificial intelligence to mimic voices and create convincing fraud.
Scammers use AI to clone the voices of family members or authority figures. The technology makes calls sound urgent and believable.
Regulatory bodies like the FCC have limited tools to combat these AI-driven threats. Current laws focus on spam calls and robocalls.
AI can generate realistic conversations in real time. This makes traditional detection methods obsolete.
The most common scams target the elderly and vulnerable populations. Victims often lose thousands of dollars before realizing the fraud.
Authorities recommend verifying unknown callers through separate channels. Never share personal information over the phone.
Industry leaders are developing new verification standards. These include call authentication systems to flag AI-generated content.
The threat will grow as AI voice technology becomes cheaper and more accessible. Consumer awareness and prevention remain the best defense.





