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| Format: | Recurso digital |
| Language: | English |
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Zenodo
2026
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| Online Access: | https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.18316023 |
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| _version_ | 1866901203229605888 |
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| author | Revista, Zen |
| author_facet | Revista, Zen |
| contents | <p>This paper examines the emergence and proliferation of fraudulent call center operations in India, which annually defraud victims worldwide of approximately <strong>$10 billion USD</strong>, with particular concentration on elderly Americans. Through socioeconomic analysis, we investigate the structural factors that enabled India’s transformation from a legitimate <strong>business process outsourcing (BPO)</strong> hub into a global center for telecommunications fraud.</p> <p>We trace the <strong>evolution of scam methodologies</strong>, from early <em>technical support fraud</em> schemes to increasingly sophisticated <em>IRS impersonation</em> and <em>refund scams</em>, highlighting how advances in VoIP technology, data breaches, and lax cross-border enforcement facilitated exponential growth. Furthermore, we analyze <strong>systemic enforcement failures</strong> within both Indian and international jurisdictions, emphasizing issues such as police corruption, weak cybercrime legislation, and the jurisdictional limits of Western law enforcement agencies.</p> <p>The study also evaluates the emergence of <strong>“scambaiting”</strong>—a decentralized, online counter-fraud movement where volunteers infiltrate and expose scam networks—as both a social and technological phenomenon of digital resistance.</p> <p>Drawing on recent data showing a <strong>101% growth in fraud volume in India during 2024</strong>, alongside the <strong>displacement of legitimate call center operations</strong> to the Philippines and to <strong>prison-based labor programs</strong> in the United States, we contextualize telecommunications fraud within broader patterns of <strong>globalization</strong>, <strong>labor market disruption</strong>, and <strong>regulatory arbitrage</strong>.</p> <p>We conclude that addressing this transnational criminal enterprise requires:</p> <ol> <li> <p><strong>Coordinated international enforcement frameworks</strong> to close jurisdictional loopholes;</p> </li> <li> <p><strong>Structural economic reforms</strong> addressing India’s acute youth unemployment crisis (with <strong>83% of the unemployed aged 15–29</strong>); and</p> </li> <li> <p><strong>Comprehensive victim protection strategies</strong>, including digital literacy programs and restitution mechanisms for vulnerable populations.</p> </li> </ol> <p>Together, these measures are essential to counter the convergence of economic desperation, digital opportunity, and weak governance that sustains India’s multibillion-dollar fraud industry.</p> |
| format | Recurso digital |
| id | zenodo_https___doi_org_10_5281_zenodo_18316023 |
| institution | Zenodo |
| language | eng |
| publishDate | 2026 |
| publisher | Zenodo |
| record_format | zenodo |
| spellingShingle | The Transnational Infrastructure of Indian Call Center Scams: A Socioeconomic Analysis of Digital Fraud Networks, Enforcement Challenges, and Grassroots Counter-Scam Movements Revista, Zen <p>This paper examines the emergence and proliferation of fraudulent call center operations in India, which annually defraud victims worldwide of approximately <strong>$10 billion USD</strong>, with particular concentration on elderly Americans. Through socioeconomic analysis, we investigate the structural factors that enabled India’s transformation from a legitimate <strong>business process outsourcing (BPO)</strong> hub into a global center for telecommunications fraud.</p> <p>We trace the <strong>evolution of scam methodologies</strong>, from early <em>technical support fraud</em> schemes to increasingly sophisticated <em>IRS impersonation</em> and <em>refund scams</em>, highlighting how advances in VoIP technology, data breaches, and lax cross-border enforcement facilitated exponential growth. Furthermore, we analyze <strong>systemic enforcement failures</strong> within both Indian and international jurisdictions, emphasizing issues such as police corruption, weak cybercrime legislation, and the jurisdictional limits of Western law enforcement agencies.</p> <p>The study also evaluates the emergence of <strong>“scambaiting”</strong>—a decentralized, online counter-fraud movement where volunteers infiltrate and expose scam networks—as both a social and technological phenomenon of digital resistance.</p> <p>Drawing on recent data showing a <strong>101% growth in fraud volume in India during 2024</strong>, alongside the <strong>displacement of legitimate call center operations</strong> to the Philippines and to <strong>prison-based labor programs</strong> in the United States, we contextualize telecommunications fraud within broader patterns of <strong>globalization</strong>, <strong>labor market disruption</strong>, and <strong>regulatory arbitrage</strong>.</p> <p>We conclude that addressing this transnational criminal enterprise requires:</p> <ol> <li> <p><strong>Coordinated international enforcement frameworks</strong> to close jurisdictional loopholes;</p> </li> <li> <p><strong>Structural economic reforms</strong> addressing India’s acute youth unemployment crisis (with <strong>83% of the unemployed aged 15–29</strong>); and</p> </li> <li> <p><strong>Comprehensive victim protection strategies</strong>, including digital literacy programs and restitution mechanisms for vulnerable populations.</p> </li> </ol> <p>Together, these measures are essential to counter the convergence of economic desperation, digital opportunity, and weak governance that sustains India’s multibillion-dollar fraud industry.</p> |
| title | The Transnational Infrastructure of Indian Call Center Scams: A Socioeconomic Analysis of Digital Fraud Networks, Enforcement Challenges, and Grassroots Counter-Scam Movements |
| url | https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.18316023 |