Creating a fictitious online persona using stolen photos and fabricated personal details to deceive others, typically in romantic contexts on dating apps, social media, or messaging platforms.
Creating a fictitious online persona using stolen photos and fabricated personal details to deceive others, typically in romantic contexts on dating apps, social media, or messaging platforms.
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The term "catfishing" was popularized by the 2010 documentary "Catfish" and the subsequent MTV series. It refers to the practice of creating a fake online identity to lure people into emotional relationships. While not always financially motivated, catfishing is the foundation of many romance scams.
Catfishers steal photos from real people's social media profiles, create elaborate backstories, and maintain their fake identities over weeks, months, or even years. They may use photo editing tools and now AI-generated images to create convincing fake profiles.
The motivations vary: some catfish for emotional satisfaction, others for revenge, but the most dangerous catfish are those running romance scams who build relationships specifically to extract money from their victims.
The "Tinder Swindler" Simon Leviev used a fake identity as the son of a diamond mogul to catfish multiple women on dating apps. He lived lavishly on money borrowed from previous victims, convincing new targets to take out loans to "help" him, ultimately defrauding victims of an estimated $10 million.