Meta disables 150,000 accounts linked to Southeast Asia scam centers

Peter Chofield Avatar
2–3 minutes

Meta says it disabled more than 150,000 Facebook and Instagram accounts linked to scam center networks operating in Southeast Asia as part of a broader international disruption effort targeting industrial-scale online fraud. The company said the enforcement action focused on criminal groups that used its platforms to recruit workers, advertise scam compounds, and run fraud campaigns against victims around the world.

According to Meta’s report, the takedowns were tied to networks connected to scam compounds in Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar, the Philippines, and the United Arab Emirates. Meta said many of the removed accounts were used to lure people into fraudulent investment schemes, romance scams, fake job offers, and other social-engineering operations run out of the compounds.

“Scam centers are sophisticated criminal enterprises that use a mix of forced labor, social engineering and digital platforms to scale fraud globally.” — Meta

Meta said the crackdown was carried out with support from law-enforcement agencies and other partners, including a joint effort in Thailand that led to the arrest of 21 people allegedly involved in scam-center activity. The company said it shared threat intelligence with investigators to help identify the networks, map their online infrastructure, and support enforcement actions beyond its own platforms.

Recruitment lures and scam ads helped feed the compounds

Meta said the scam-center operators used Facebook and Instagram to advertise jobs that promised high salaries, travel, and accommodation in Southeast Asia, only for recruits to be trafficked into scam compounds or pressured into participating in fraud schemes. The company said other accounts posed as investment advisers, romantic partners, or prospective employers to build trust with targets before trying to steal money or personal information.

Meta’s report says the networks also used fake or compromised accounts, pages, and advertising infrastructure to scale the schemes and avoid detection. The company said it removed not only the front-end scam accounts but also related clusters of pages, ad assets, and linked accounts used to support the operations.

Meta said it continues to work with regional investigators and outside organizations to track scam-center activity and disrupt the online services these groups rely on. The enforcement action adds to the broader pattern of coordinated cybercrime disruption efforts already covered by Cyberwarzone, including INTERPOL’s Operation Synergia III takedown of 45,000 malicious IPs and servers and recent CISA action on actively exploited vulnerabilities.