Australia’s regulator warns of growing AI-powered sextortion threat
New campaign in Australia exposes the tactics behind AI-enhanced sextortion and online blackmail schemes.
Australia’s eSafety Commissioner has launched a public awareness campaign warning that criminals are increasingly using AI and other digital tools in sextortion scams.
The initiative, titled ‘If sextortionists were honest’, uses generative AI to expose deceptive tactics used by online criminals targeting victims through dating apps and social media platforms.
According to eSafety, more than 3,300 reports of sexual extortion were received through its image-based abuse scheme in 2025. Eighty-six percent of reports came from males of all ages, while 42% of all sextortion reports involved males aged 18 to 24.
eSafety Commissioner Julie Inman Grant said offenders are already weaponising face-swapping and voice-cloning technologies, while using generative AI to create fake but convincing online characters and improve scam scripts that previously contained warning signs such as poor grammar or inconsistent messaging.
Reports made to eSafety show that first contact frequently occurs on platforms such as Tinder, Instagram, and Grindr, before conversations are moved to WhatsApp, Telegram, or other messaging apps. Offenders may then search victims’ social media accounts to identify family members and friends they can threaten to contact.
The regulator said overseas offenders often try to appear local and legitimate, including by spoofing Australian phone numbers, using intimate images taken from other victims, or using bank accounts belonging to previous victims to receive and move payments.
eSafety said the safest response is to stop contact, report the account to the platform, block the offender, preserve evidence where possible, and seek support rather than paying. The regulator also called on platforms to take proactive Safety by Design steps, including better language analysis, classifier-based detection, accessible reporting and blocking tools, swift removal pathways for image-based abuse, and cross-platform signal sharing.
Why does it matter?
The campaign shows how generative AI is making online coercion and scams harder to detect. Sextortion is no longer only a problem of fake accounts and blackmail messages: offenders can now use AI-generated personas, improved scripts, voice cloning, and deepfake-style techniques to build trust and pressure victims more effectively. That raises the importance of platform-level detection, user reporting tools, digital literacy, and victim support.
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