Uncover the hidden architecture of modern scams and learn how interconnected networks exploit everyday digital conveniences to fuel a booming global fraud ecosystem.

Fraud today is no longer limited to obvious scams or suspicious emails. It is embedded into the speed, convenience, and trust structures of modern life. In this eye-opening session, Ashley Karr explores how fraud and scams actually operate—from first contact and trust-building to financial extraction and disappearance.
Rather than relying on fear-based warnings or sensational examples, this webinar approaches fraud as a systems problem shaped by digital platforms, behavioral psychology, automation, incentives, and human decision-making. Participants will learn why intelligent, capable people still fall victim to scams, how modern environments condition us for fast compliance, and why familiarity no longer guarantees safety.
Attendees will leave with a practical framework for identifying manipulation patterns, slowing down high-risk interactions, and reducing exposure across communications, devices, accounts, and financial systems. Grounded in real-world behavior rather than paranoia, this session is designed for professionals, consumers, families, and organizations seeking a modern understanding of fraud prevention in an increasingly optimized digital world.
Key Topics Discussed:

Human Factors Engineer, Fraud Prevention and Cybersecurity Strategist
Ashley Karr is a human factors engineer and product design strategist with nearly two decades of experience working at the intersection of human behavior, complex systems, and applied technology design. Her work focuses on how people interact with modern digital environments where convenience, speed, distraction, and cognitive overload often shape decisions as much as intent or awareness. She has worked across finance, enterprise technology, cybersecurity-adjacent systems, identity protection, and large-scale digital product environments, including roles with organizations such as Apple, JPMorgan Chase, Oracle, and T-Mobile for Business. Her work examines how modern fraud operates in practice, not only through technical means but through predictable patterns of human behavior under pressure, trust, and limited attention. She focuses on how manipulation is engineered and scaled within connected systems, why traditional fraud prevention approaches often fail, and where system design unintentionally increases exposure. Her areas of focus include fraud prevention, digital safety, identity protection, human factors engineering, cybersecurity awareness, scam reduction, and operational resilience in complex digital environments.