According to a new report by the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC), organized crime syndicates across Asia are growing rapidly, leveraging cutting-edge technologies like artificial intelligence (AI), cryptocurrencies, and messaging platforms such as Telegram to expand their illegal operations.
The UN report highlights how these groups are utilizing AI to automate complex tasks like money laundering and coding malware, making cybercrime cheaper and easier to execute.
Masood Karimipour, UNODC’s regional representative for Southeast Asia and the Pacific, explained that this has led to the development of a “criminal service economy” that makes Asia a prime testing ground for transnational crime networks.
This expansion is occurring so quickly that it is “rapidly outpacing governments’ capacity to contain it.”
The Role of AI in Lowering Crime Barriers
Generative AI is a key driver behind this surge, enabling organized crime groups to handle sophisticated processes that were previously labour-intensive and risky.
The report points out a staggering 1,500% increase in deepfake-related crimes in the Asia-Pacific region from 2022 to 2023. Additionally, there was a 600% rise in deepfake-related advertisements on platforms like Telegram between February and July 2024.
These technologies, combined with AI-powered tools like translation apps and face-swapping software, are making social engineering attacks far more effective.
The availability of AI tools on underground markets has made it easier for criminals to purchase and deploy them, effectively lowering the barriers to entry for high-stakes cybercrime.
This is not just limited to hacking or phishing but extends to the automated laundering of illicit funds.
Professionalization and Infrastructure Support Crime Networks
The UN report also highlights how the influx of capital and market expansion have led to increasing professionalization among criminal groups. These gangs, once small and fragmented, have now transformed into larger, well-organized enterprises with complex operational structures.
They’ve built solid ICT infrastructure and established compounds staffed with individuals often forced into labour.
Additionally, they utilize mule bank accounts, cryptocurrency wallets, and specialized teams to manage these accounts, further professionalizing their service-based criminal business models.
Even more concerning is the fact that some of these services operate in a legal grey area, complicating efforts to combat these networks.
As these groups continue to evolve, their sophisticated methods will likely challenge regulatory and law enforcement efforts across the region.