Column: Dion Smith On AI, Scams, Laws & More

August 30, 2025 | 0 Comments

[Opinion column written by the OBA's Dion Smith]

Many of us live life juggling too much at once to pay attention to every warning or crisis until something happens to us, or someone close to us. It’s human nature to tune things out until they hit home.

In previous opinion pieces, I’ve raised concerns about the increasing number of Bermudians being scammed some out of their life savings through both banking fraud and artificial intelligence [AI] deception. These issues are still very much with us, and they deserve a fresh spotlight. I’ll be brief, but direct.

Banking Fraud in Bermuda: A Known Vulnerability

Bermuda has seen a disturbing number of cybercrime incidents in which funds have been directly extracted from personal bank accounts. Despite the security measures that exist, many people don’t realize just how limited these protections really are.

In many cases, even if a person is cautious and self-aware, the system doesn’t give them enough control over their own financial safety. For example, why not allow customers the option to disable wire transfers on their accounts? Not everyone needs this functionality and for those who don’t, disabling it could serve as a simple but powerful fraud prevention tool.

Wire transfers have been the method of choice for many fraudsters. Once the money leaves a Bermudian bank and travels through other institutions especially ones without established relationships with our banks it becomes nearly impossible to trace or recover. Banks are well aware of this, and yet the tools to mitigate it remain optional or poorly communicated.

AI and the Deepfake Threat: It’s Not Just Sci-Fi Anymore

AI is now playing a growing role in fraud, particularly through impersonation. Several scams have made the rounds where AI-generated videos and audio clips appear to show popular Bermudians endorsing investment schemes. These look and sound convincing because they use the real person’s face and voice, cloned from interviews, podcasts, or public appearances.

This isn’t theoretical anymore. This is now a threat to anyone with a digital footprint.

We urgently need legislation in Bermuda that gives individuals ownership over their own biometric data specifically, their voice and image. This would make it illegal for others to use AI to replicate someone’s likeness without consent.

Denmark is already addressing this issue. According to CNN,Legal News [June 28, 2025], Danish lawmakers are pushing for stricter protections for artists and public figures from digital identity theft. Bermuda should be doing the same.

We must protect not just artists and public figures, but all individuals from the new forms of identity theft made possible by AI and weak banking controls. A few simple changes like offering users more control over their accounts and legislating AI usage could go a long way.

Let’s not wait until it happens to you. Let’s act now, while we still have the chance to get ahead of this Bermuda.

- Dion Smith ran in the February 2025 General Election in constituency 27, Warwick North Central

click here banner technology 7

Read More About

Category: All, technology

Leave a Reply