简体中文
繁體中文
English
Pусский
日本語
ภาษาไทย
Tiếng Việt
Bahasa Indonesia
Español
हिन्दी
Filippiiniläinen
Français
Deutsch
Português
Türkçe
한국어
العربية
اردو
New Scam Tactic Alert: That Financial News Article You Just Read Could Be a Trap!
Abstract:Imagine clicking on what appears to be a breaking news article from a reputable outlet, reading it through, and following a link to what looks like a legitimate trading platform, only to discover weeks later that none of it was real.

Imagine clicking on what appears to be a breaking news article from a reputable outlet, reading it through, and following a link to what looks like a legitimate trading platform, only to discover weeks later that none of it was real. Not the article. Not the journalist's name on it. Not the investment platform. This is no longer a hypothetical. It is an active and escalating scam method targeting unsuspecting readers across the globe, and Malaysians who consume international financial content online are not immune.
Cybercriminals have been constructing near-perfect replicas of well-known news websites, populating them with entirely fabricated stories, and seeding those stories across social media feeds through paid advertisements and sponsored posts. The articles are engineered to appear credible. They carry the fonts, layouts, and visual design of trusted publishers. They use the names and photographs of real journalists as bylines. And they feature recognisable public figures, framing them as having recently profited through some exclusive investment platform that readers are then urged to explore.
One widely reported example involves a fabricated article that appeared to come from a major British newspaper. The piece claimed that a prominent billionaire had abruptly walked out of a live television interview after a presenter revealed details of his personal finances, and that his secret weapon had been an obscure online investment platform generating extraordinary returns. Readers who clicked through were taken not to any news page but to a cloned version of a legitimate cryptocurrency exchange, where they were asked to enter personal details. Shortly after registering, they received phone calls from individuals posing as investment advisors, pushing them to deposit money into fraudulent trading accounts.
The same method has been used to falsely associate well-known commentators and broadcasters with fabricated endorsements of crypto schemes. Researchers have found that the AI-generated images used in these fake articles can be identified through digital watermarks, indicating they were produced using commercially available artificial intelligence tools. This lowers the production barrier significantly for criminal groups, meaning the volume of such fake content is likely to grow rather than shrink.
What makes this scam particularly dangerous is the layered illusion. Readers are primed to trust journalism. When something appears on a site that looks indistinguishable from a news outlet they have used before, their guard drops. Social media platforms amplify this further by placing these fabricated articles directly into feeds alongside genuine content.
Security researchers have also identified a withdrawal trap built into the fake platforms. Victims who attempt to retrieve supposed profits are told they must pay additional fees, complete verification processes, or meet minimum balance thresholds before funds can be released. None of this ever results in a payout. It is simply a mechanism to extract more money from people who have already lost some.
There are warning signs to watch for. Fake articles often carry unusually long and dramatic headlines. They include embedded links actively directing readers to invest, something no legitimate news publication does within editorial content. The URLs of fake sites differ slightly from the real ones, sometimes by a single character. And any article that frames an investment opportunity as urgent, secret, or under threat of suppression by authorities should be treated as a red flag immediately.
Verify every broker and platform independently before you act. WikiFX provides a searchable database of licensed and flagged trading entities. When in doubt, check first.

Disclaimer:
The views in this article only represent the author's personal views, and do not constitute investment advice on this platform. This platform does not guarantee the accuracy, completeness and timeliness of the information in the article, and will not be liable for any loss caused by the use of or reliance on the information in the article.
