Consumer interest in AI tools has created fertile ground for fraud. The names "ChatGPT," "Claude," "Midjourney," and "Gemini" carry enormous recognition — and fraudsters exploit that recognition by creating lookalike apps, typosquatted domains, fake browser extensions, and fraudulent subscription services that appear to offer AI capabilities while actually harvesting data, installing malware, or simply taking money for nothing.

Types of Fake AI Tool Scams

Malicious Browser Extensions

Browser extensions claiming to be "ChatGPT for Chrome" or "AI Assistant" are among the most commonly reported fake AI tool vectors. These extensions may provide limited functionality to appear legitimate while simultaneously stealing browser cookies, accessing saved passwords, reading your browsing history, and intercepting form data including credit card numbers and login credentials.

The FTC has documented numerous reports of malicious browser extensions operating under AI branding. The Google Chrome Web Store and Firefox Add-ons have both removed numerous fake AI extensions, but new ones appear constantly.

Typosquatted Domains

Domains like "chatgbt.com," "openai-chat.com," "claude-ai.app," and hundreds of variations attempt to capture users who mistype or are directed via social media or search ads. These sites may phish for login credentials, offer fake "free trials" that capture payment data, or install download-based malware.

App Store Impostors

Both the Apple App Store and Google Play have experienced waves of fake AI apps — often named in ways that reference major AI tools without directly using trademarked names. These apps may provide a basic AI wrapper over free APIs while charging premium prices, or they may simply collect subscription payments and provide nothing functional.

Social Media AI Ad Scams

Paid social media ads impersonating OpenAI, Anthropic, Midjourney, and other AI companies direct users to fraudulent sites that collect payment information. These ads often appear visually identical to legitimate company branding and are served through normal advertising systems that have limited detection capability for domain-level fraud.

How to Verify AI Tools Before Using Them

🌐 Official Domains Only

Major AI tools have specific, known official domains: ChatGPT at chat.openai.com, Claude at claude.ai, Midjourney at midjourney.com, Gemini at gemini.google.com. Bookmark these official URLs directly. Any other domain offering these services is unofficial and potentially fraudulent. Do not click AI tool links from social media ads or unsolicited emails.

🔍 Verify Browser Extension Permissions

Before installing any browser extension, review the permissions it requests. An AI writing assistant has no legitimate reason to access your browsing history, read all sites you visit, or manage other extensions. If an AI extension requests permissions far beyond what its described function requires, do not install it.

⭐ Check App Store Reviews and Developer

Review the developer name, publication date, and review history before installing any AI app. Legitimate AI companies publish their apps under verified developer accounts. Check that the developer matches the company you expect — "OpenAI" not "OpenAI Technologies LLC" or other variations. Look for review patterns that suggest fake reviews (all 5-star, posted within a few days).

💳 Never Enter Payment Information on Unofficial Sites

If you're accessing an AI tool via a link you didn't directly navigate to yourself, do not enter credit card information. Navigate directly to the official site in a new browser window before any payment interaction.

If You've Already Downloaded or Subscribed to a Fake AI Tool

If device security has been compromised, see recovery guidance at AIScamRecovery.com. Identity protection resources at Best Identity Protection After an AI Scam. Prevention fundamentals at PreventAIScams.com.

Related Resources

Frequently Asked Questions

How do fake AI tool scams work?

They impersonate or mimic legitimate AI products through fake apps, browser extensions, or websites. They collect payment information, install malware, access device data, or charge subscriptions for non-functional services.

How do I know if an AI tool is legitimate?

Access AI tools only from their official websites. Verify the domain is correct. Check app store developer identity. Be suspicious of any AI tool offered via social media ads or unsolicited emails.

What should I do if I installed a fake AI tool?

Uninstall it immediately. Change all passwords accessible while it was active. Dispute unauthorized charges with your bank. Run a malware scan. Report to the FTC and the relevant app store.