Cybercrime cost older americans $3 billion in 2021

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Cybercrime reported to the FBI cost Americans 50 and older nearly $3 billion last year, a 62 percent increase from 2020, according to data from the bureau. The steep rise in dollar losses


came despite a drop in incidents reported by older adults to the FBI’s Internet Crime Complaint Center (IC3). Americans ages 50 and over filed 166,831 complaints with the cybercrime unit in


2021, down from 191,768 the year before. ​ The FBI’s 2021 “Elder Fraud Report,” issued April 5, shows a similar trend across generations, with scam report numbers stable or declining but


losses spiking for all age groups. Older adults continue to bear the heaviest cost from online crime, though, with an average loss per incident of $17,662 for people 50 and up, compared with


$10,166 for younger adults.​ BIGGER BITE FROM TECH SUPPORT, ROMANCE SCAMS ​ Overall, nearly a quarter of last year’s total cybercrime losses were borne by people 60 and older, the


population that is the focus of the new report. Tech support scams, investment fraud and what the bureau terms “confidence fraud” — cons that play on victims’ emotions and affections,


primarily via romance scams — were major drivers of rising fraud costs, collectively accounting for more than half of that age group’s losses. Confidence frauds, which also include 


grandparent scams, were the costliest cons for older adults, with 2021 losses topping $432 million for victims age 60 and up, a 54 percent increase from the prior year.  But it’s tech


support scams — in which crooks posing as IT pros from well-known tech companies charge hefty fees to fix fabricated computer problems — that have seen the most explosive growth during the 


COVID-19 pandemic.  This con was the most commonly reported by people 60 and older last year, with 13,900 complaints, more than double the 2019 number. Losses from tech support scams grew


more than sixfold over the same span, from $38.4 million in 2019 to nearly $238 million in 2021. While tech support scammers typically impersonate familiar software, cybersecurity and


e-commerce brands, the IC3 has seen “an increase in complaints reporting the impersonation of customer support, which has taken on a variety of forms, such as financial and banking


institutions, utility companies or virtual currency exchanges,” the report states. CRYPTO GAINS CURRENCY WITH SCAMMERS Another key finding: Older victims in tech support, romance and other


scams are increasingly being asked to pay in cryptocurrency. Virtual currencies such as Bitcoin, Ethereum, Litecoin and Ripple are “becoming the preferred payment method for all types of


scams,” the FBI warns.