Category: Consumer Protection

  • HONOR Tackles Rising Silent Call Threats in Malaysia with Enhanced AI-Powered Voice Scam Detection

    HONOR Tackles Rising Silent Call Threats in Malaysia with Enhanced AI-Powered Voice Scam Detection

    A rising scam call tactic known as the “silent call” is increasingly worrying Malaysians, as fraudsters leverage artificial intelligence (AI) to clone victims’ voices and impersonate people they know to demand money transfers. Authorities have urged the public to stay vigilant, especially when receiving calls where the caller remains silent for several seconds. Social media is filled with stories of Malaysians encountering these calls, highlighting the urgent need for protective measures. In response, HONOR is enhancing the Magic8 Pro with a new AI Voice Cloning Detection feature, designed to identify AI-generated voices. This feature will be available via a software update in late December 2025.

    The AI Voice Cloning Detection complements HONOR Magic8 Pro’s existing AI Deepfake Detection, analyzing calls for cloned or synthesized voices and notifying users when anomalies are detected. The necessity for such protection is evident: recent reports include a woman who lost RM5,000 after a voice clone of her employer deceived her, and a travel agent who fell victim to a call mimicking a friend, losing RM49,800. With this feature, users can answer unknown numbers with greater confidence and reduced anxiety.

    In addition, the Magic8 Pro will include AI Scam Number Detection, which cross-checks incoming calls against known scam databases and alerts users if a number is flagged as suspicious. This provides an extra layer of security, helping users avoid potential scams even before answering a call.

    Beyond calls, HONOR has upgraded its AI Deepfake Detection for video calls, now capable of screening up to eight people simultaneously to detect digitally altered faces. With deepfake-related fraud cases investigated by police numbering 454 last year, causing losses of RM2.72 million, these advanced features position the Magic8 Pro as a strong deterrent against AI-driven fraud nationwide.

    HONOR’s dedication to integrating privacy and security into its devices has earned global recognition. Its built-in deepfake detection technology received the TIME Best Inventions 2025 Award for Privacy and Security, underscoring the brand’s commitment to responsible AI innovation and ensuring users remain protected as digital threats evolve.

    For more information, visit HONOR’s official website at www.honor.com/my.

  • The Rising Threat of Fake Reviews Undermining Digital Trust in Malaysia

    The Rising Threat of Fake Reviews Undermining Digital Trust in Malaysia

    In Malaysia, online reviews have become a critical part of consumers’ decision-making, with many relying on genuine feedback before clicking “buy,” “book,” or “order.” A study by Universiti Putra Malaysia highlighted that the authenticity of a review strongly influences purchase intention, underscoring the trust Malaysians place in these opinions. However, this trust is under threat as digital platforms are increasingly flooded with AI-generated reviews, paid click-farm content, and coordinated manipulation campaigns using fake accounts. Google alone removed over 240 million reviews in 2024 for violating policies, a 41.18% increase from the previous year, reflecting the scale of the problem. As fake reviews proliferate, genuine feedback loses significance, leaving consumers unsure whether a recommendation is authentic or automated.

    The consequences of manipulated reviews extend beyond consumer uncertainty. Bots, throwaway accounts, and sophisticated AI-written reviews now dominate online platforms, temporarily inflating product ratings and misleading buyers. When consumers uncover the truth, they feel deceived and often leave genuine negative feedback, creating a cycle of disappointment that erodes trust in both brands and platforms. Small businesses are particularly vulnerable, with some falling victim to scams where fake reviews are posted on Google Maps or other platforms, followed by extortion attempts to remove them. Honest sellers struggle to compete as authentic feedback is buried beneath manipulated ratings, harming reputations and sales.

    The underlying issue lies in outdated verification systems that were designed for a simpler internet. Traditional measures like email verification, phone authentication, and CAPTCHAs are no longer sufficient against modern bots, AI-generated identities, and coordinated fake accounts. While platforms conduct sweeps to remove fraudulent reviews, they are consistently challenged by the speed and scale of synthetic content. Each fake review that bypasses safeguards diminishes platform credibility, leaving consumers skeptical of even genuine feedback and undermining trust in online ratings.

    To restore confidence in digital platforms, verifying the presence of a real human behind an account is becoming essential. Privacy-preserving human verification systems, such as World ID, offer a solution by confirming users’ humanness without exposing personal information. Using tools like the Orb, which captures an image of a user’s face and eyes only to verify they are real before immediately deleting it, platforms can establish authenticity while maintaining privacy. Zero-knowledge proofs then allow users to signal “I’m a real human” without revealing any personal details, creating a foundation for trustworthy online interactions.

    With Malaysia’s digital economy accelerating—e-commerce revenue reached RM937.5 billion in the first nine months of 2025—the integrity of digital interactions is critical. Privacy-preserving human verification provides a practical path to ensure reviews and other online activities are genuine, supporting both consumer trust and business fairness. As Malaysians increasingly rely on digital platforms for everyday decisions, the ability to prove humanness is emerging as a key factor in safeguarding trust, protecting the digital economy, and ensuring that online recommendations continue to serve their intended purpose.

  • Strengthening the Human Element in Malaysia’s E-Commerce Sector

    Strengthening the Human Element in Malaysia’s E-Commerce Sector

    Malaysia’s e-commerce sector has experienced unprecedented growth, transforming the way people shop and how businesses operate. Consumers can now purchase everything from everyday essentials to luxury goods with just a few taps, often without leaving social media platforms. This convenience, however, brings new challenges, as artificial intelligence (AI) increasingly blurs the line between real and automated activity. While AI has revolutionised online commerce—powering personalised recommendations, automating inventory, and optimising logistics—it has also enabled bots to manipulate demand, scrape listings, generate fake reviews, and even create purchases that never occurred. What started as a tool for efficiency has quietly introduced risks that threaten the trust between businesses and consumers.

    According to the Department of Statistics Malaysia, e-commerce revenue reached RM1.184 trillion in 2023, marking a 5.1 percent increase from the previous year. While Business-to-Business transactions accounted for the bulk at 69 percent, Business-to-Consumer activity surged by 7.7 percent, surpassing B2B and signalling a shift toward a consumer-driven digital marketplace. Yet with Malaysia’s increasingly connected digital landscape comes vulnerability. In the first half of 2025 alone, Malaysians lost RM1.12 billion to online scams, including RM63 million in e-commerce fraud, highlighting the urgent need for stronger digital protection alongside digital progress.

    The challenges are particularly acute for small and medium enterprises (SMEs), which comprise 96.1 percent of Malaysian businesses. Many SMEs have embraced digitalisation but lack the technical resources to detect or counter automated threats, leading to hidden costs in operations, security, and customer trust. As social commerce becomes Malaysia’s new digital high street—with over 70 percent of establishments using social media and 56.2 percent maintaining websites—the stakes grow higher. Fraudsters exploit one-tap checkouts, stored payment details, and AI-generated personas, making it harder than ever to distinguish human activity from automation.

    To address these risks, Malaysia needs a method of confirming the authenticity of digital interactions. Innovations like World provide a privacy-preserving solution to verify that online users are real, unique people without revealing personal information. By leveraging cryptographic technology, World allows each individual to complete a one-time verification that confirms their humanness, enabling businesses to prevent bot-driven transactions, ensure limited-edition items reach real fans, and restore trust in online reviews. This approach emphasises a simple but powerful principle: one person, one verification.

    Adopting human-centric verification aligns closely with Malaysia’s broader digital ambitions, which prioritise innovation, security, and privacy. For policymakers, it strengthens consumer protection frameworks. For businesses, it restores fairness and authenticity to an environment increasingly dominated by algorithms. As Malaysia’s digital economy approaches the trillion-ringgit milestone, its next phase of growth will depend on trust. AI will continue to fuel innovation, but the true strength of e-commerce lies in keeping people—not machines—at the centre of every click, review, and transaction. By putting humans first, Malaysia can ensure a sustainable, secure, and trustworthy digital marketplace for years to come.