Deepfake phishing attack

Make your employees resilient against the $25 million scam.

A demonstration of AI-generated deepfakes. The image shows a man in a suit speaking in what looks like an office. Overlaid instructions show how AI tools can alter the video: “Use this voice for speaking,” “Make it look like this person,” “Add realistic office background, make his voice similar to given example,” and “Add more emotion to his tone.” These highlight how deepfake technology can change appearance, voice, and expressions to create convincing but artificial videos.
Dashboard view from Hoxhunt showing organizational readiness against AI-generated threats. The interface displays a list of users with training status, alongside a live chart tracking “% Fail Rate” over time in July. The chart shows peaks and drops, illustrating how the system measures vulnerability levels and improvements in resilience.

Train against the dangers of AI deepfakes

Train your key employees to understand the realities of deepfake technology so they are prepare if an attacker targets them.

Our training scenario measures your readiness against AI-powered threats. Users that go through a simulated scenario understand that phishing is not just word in a message, it can also deceives their eyes and ears.

Equipped with the training experience, employees who hold access and information become less likely to blindly trust requests coming through fake video calls.
A simulated video call interface showing a deepfaked company executive speaking. The call window resembles a real conferencing platform, complete with controls for mute, video, chat, and participants. This illustrates how attackers can use AI-generated deepfake videos to impersonate executives during live meetings.

Deepfake training using your own executives

We offer a deepfake attack simulation that’s fully customizable to your context. We’ll create a deepfake of one of your executives likeness and voice. The attack scenario plays out in a fake video meeting, matching what you normally use: Microsoft Teams, Google Meet, Zoom. You select the recipients that would benefit most from the training.

See the deepfake attack in action

Click through the steps below to explore the steps of the deepfake phishing attack simulation.

Prevent costly scams by preparing your employees against the realities of AI deepfakes.

Social engineers and hackers are armed with constantly improving AI tools. With just a video clip or conference recording shared on LinkedIn, attackers can create convincing deepfakes. At their worst, these scams can lead of serious financial loss—$25 million in the case of one fraud victim! [1]

Request a demo to train against deepfake attacks.

[1] CNN | Finance worker pays out $25 million after video call with deepfake ‘chief financial officer’