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Parliament to public: Social hackers have domino effect

The recent compromise of one of the South African Parliament’s Youtube accounts, to promote a fraudulent “$Ramaphosa” cryptocurrency token, underscores the insidious nature of scammers impersonating trusted figures or institutions and abusing their public currency: trust.

The speed with which the “$Ramaphosa” token was created and promoted via the hacked accounts suggests a well-orchestrated and financially motivated operation. One breach can quickly become a trust multiplier, where criminals hijack an authoritative source to spread fraudulent schemes to a vast audience.

Exploiting trust:

This incident is not an isolated event. Cybercriminals have increasingly exploited the credibility of public figures and institutions to deceive the public. By impersonating celebrities and reputable organisations, they manipulate trust to fuel financial scams.

And with deepfake technology these tactics are becoming more deceptive than ever. Fraudsters have used AI-generated deepfakes of Elon Musk, Jeff Bezos, and even Warren Buffett to promote bogus crypto investments. The Guardian recently reported how cybercriminals have been using impersonated versions of influencers and celebrities including the money expert Martin Lewis and radio DJ Zoe Ball to dupe thousands of victims world wide.

How to protect yourself and your online presence

Whether you’re a consumer or a content creator, staying vigilant against these scams is crucial.

For consumers:

For YouTube channel owners and organisations:

Cultivate a zero trust mindset

With the increasing use of AI-powered deception, both individuals and institutions must adopt a Zero Trust Mindset—assuming that no digital interaction is inherently trustworthy until verified.

Cybercriminals prey on trust—whether by hijacking government social media accounts, impersonating public figures, or deploying deepfake scams. The Parliament hack is a case study in how bad actors weaponise credibility to spread financial fraud.

A Zero Trust approach means:
– Verifying all sources before engaging, especially with financial transactions.
– Assuming that impersonation is likely, even from seemingly reputable accounts.

– Strengthening security measures—both personally and institutionally—through multi-factor authentication, account monitoring, and public awareness.

The digital landscape is shifting—fraudsters are evolving, but so can we.

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