Trends · High urgency

Catfishing

A fake identity — a fake age, a fake gender, a fake life — used to build a relationship with a teen online, sometimes for sex, sometimes for money, sometimes for cruelty.

A phone screen in a dim room
Most affects
10–1213–1516–18
Teen profile
Socially IsolatedDating/Relationship CuriousGamer
Family context
Busy ParentsLow Digital SupervisionRecently Moved/New School
Risk type
ExploitationPrivacyScams
I.
What it is

The short version.

Catfishing is the construction of a fake persona to deceive a target online. Modern AI-generated profile photos make it nearly invisible to detect by photo alone. Teens are catfished by adults pretending to be peers, by peers pretending to be different peers, and increasingly by criminal groups running dozens of personas at once. The harm depends on the catfisher's intent — emotional, financial, sexual, or political.

II.
Where it shows up

The platforms and contexts.

Anywhere two strangers can DM each other — Instagram, Snapchat, Discord, gaming chats, dating apps, fandom servers. AI-generated photos are now the default in catfishing kits sold to predators.

III.
How long it's been around

The timeline.

The term came from a 2010 documentary, but the practice is decades older. The 2022–2024 shift is AI-generated photos: a 'person' can have hundreds of unique selfies that don't exist in a reverse-image search.

IV.
What to know

The core facts a parent needs.

  • Reverse image search is no longer reliable — AI-generated photos won't appear anywhere on the open web.
  • Catfishers from criminal groups often have an entire backstory across several platforms (a TikTok, an Instagram, mutual friends), making the persona look real.
  • Any refusal to video-chat is the strongest single signal of catfishing. Persistent excuses ('my camera is broken,' 'I'm shy') almost always mean a fake identity.
V.
The dangers

What's actually at stake.

  • Range from emotional manipulation (false relationships) to extraction (sextortion, scams) to physical harm (in-person meetings with the actual catfisher).
  • Trust damage from a catfish discovered late can shape teen relationships for years.
  • Financial catfishing — pretending to be a successful young person, then asking for help with 'a small transfer' — has grown rapidly.
VI.
Practice · 60-second talk

The talk that lands — try it now.

Imagine you just learned your teen brushed up against this. You have 60 seconds before the conversation begins. What you say first decides whether the next 20 minutes opens the door — or slams it.

The version that closes the door

"What were you thinking? Give me your phone — now."

Panic + punishment in the same breath. The teen reads it as "every honest detail will be used against me." The phone comes; the truth doesn't.

What would you open with instead? Picture it for a beat — then…

VII.
All steps in one list

Concrete next steps.

  • Set a household rule: any new online person must video-chat (with sound and face) within the first two weeks, or they're not real.
  • Reverse image search is still useful even with AI — many catfishers reuse stock or stolen photos.
  • If catfishing is confirmed, save evidence and report to the platform; if the catfisher made financial or sexual demands, also to the FBI's IC3.
VIII.
Watch

See it for yourself.

Catfishing Tinder Scammers as Their Actual Parents
If your teen is in crisis

Call or text 988 (Suicide & Crisis Lifeline, 24/7) · Text HOME to 741741 (Crisis Text Line) · Find a child psychiatrist at aacap.org · For immediate danger, call 911.

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