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Key Takeaways
- Berkshire Hathaway Inc. (BRK.A, BRK.B) issued a public warning in November 2025 about AI-generated deepfake videos of CEO Warren Buffett on social media.
- Deepfake fraud attempts surged more than 1,300% in 2024, according to voice security firm Pindrop.
- Fraudulent Buffett videos can be identified by their robotic voice quality, lip-sync errors, lighting inconsistencies, and claims that contradict his decades-long views on investing.
Earlier this month, Berkshire Hathaway issued warnings after AI-generated videos featuring CEO Warren Buffett flooded social media platforms. One channel the company referenced had amassed over 17,000 subscribers by posting AI-generated deepfake videos of the Oracle of Omaha. The visuals often look convincing, but Berkshire noted the audio typically features flat, generic speech that isn’t anything like Buffett’s natural voice.
These scams exploit Buffett’s reputation for value investing to promote crypto giveaways and investment schemes—things he has spent years denouncing. Even before the recent warnings, Buffett had discussed grave concerns over the technology.
At Berkshire’s 2024 annual shareholder meeting, Buffett warned that AI-driven scams could become “the growth industry of all time” after seeing a deepfake of himself that he said was convincing.
How To Spot a Buffett Deepfake Every Time
Deepfakes use AI to create videos that make it look like someone said or did something they never actually did. The technology has exploded because AI tools have become cheaper, easier to use, and shockingly realistic. Scammers use deepfakes to hijack trusted voices like Buffett’s, knowing people are more likely to click—and send money—when they think a billionaire investor is offering advice. With deepfakes spreading fast, knowing what to look for isn’t optional anymore:
- Voice quality: Buffett speaks in a folksy, unhurried way—pausing mid-thought, chuckling at his own jokes, letting sentences meander. Deepfakes of him we’ve reviewed tend to strip that out. If the cadence feels robotic or overly polished, it’s fake.
- Lip-sync errors: Watch his mouth when he talks. Deepfakes mess up the timing between words and lip movements. Pay attention during sounds like “p,” “b,” and “m”—they need specific mouth shapes, and fakes often botch them.
- Lighting inconsistencies: Does the lighting on his face match the background? Deepfakes struggle with how light hits skin and objects in the same scene. Do you see studio lighting the face but outdoor lighting behind Buffett? That’s a red flag.
- Suspicious claims: Buffett promoting crypto or promising quick profits goes against everything he’s said publicly for decades. Any video showing him endorsing instant wealth platforms or demanding you act now is fake.
- Source check: Buffett barely speaks publicly outside Berkshire’s annual meeting. If the video isn’t from Berkshire’s verified channels or a major news outlet, don’t trust it.
What To Do If You See One
Don’t engage. Sharing or commenting amplifies their reach, even if you’re calling them out. Instead, report the video through the platform’s fraud reporting system. On YouTube, tap the three dots next to the video, select “Report,” then choose “Scams or phishing content.” TikTok has similar options under Community Guidelines reporting.
Warn others, especially older relatives or people new to investing, who might not recognize Buffett’s actual voice or positions. The Federal Trade Commission has reported that consumers age 60 and over lost more money to fraud in 2024.
Follow only verified accounts. Berkshire’s official communications come through its investor relations page and major financial news outlets.
Tip
If Buffett were really endorsing some revolutionary investment, every legitimate news outlet would be covering it, not just some random TikTok account with a promo code.
The Bigger Picture
Deloitte predicts AI-enabled fraud could hit $40 billion in the U.S. by 2027, up from $12.3 billion in 2023. Voice fraud specialist Pindrop found that deepfake fraud attempts rose more than 1,300% in 2024—a figure that’s surely grown fast as new AI video tools have come online. Meanwhile, synthetic voice attacks on insurance companies jumped 475% in 2024, while banks had a 149% increase.
Your best defense is to treat videos now the way you treat text in email: check sources independently and question anyone demanding immediate action.
