Fake Praise, Real Money: How AI Powers the Author Scam

Patrick Radden Keefe, the best-selling author of Say Nothing and Empire of Pain, both adapted into critically acclaimed television series, has become accustomed to a daily ritual that has nothing to do with writing. It involves scanning his inbox, identifying the latest batch of elaborately crafted scam emails, and deleting them. “Every morning I wake up to two or three of these emails,” Keefe told The Hollywood Reporter in March 2026. Dan Brown, whose The Da Vinci Code has sold more than 80 million copies, has taken to sharing particularly egregious examples on Facebook. Neither fame nor decades of publishing experience offers immunity. The scammers do not discriminate; they simply scale.
What has changed is not the existence of publishing fraud, which has plagued authors for as long as there have been authors, but the sheer velocity and personalisation of the attacks. Generative AI has handed the global scam industry a set of tools that transform what was once a crude, spray-and-pray operation into something resembling a bespoke concierge service for deception. The emails arrive with flattering assessments of an author's prose style, detailed references to specific books, and proposals wrapped in the language of legitimate publishing. They are, in the words of Victoria Strauss, the veteran watchdog behind Writer Beware, evidence that “generative AI has become embedded in the world of overseas writing fraud.”
This is the story of how that embedding works, who it targets, and why, despite its increasing polish, the scam layer remains riddled with structural failures that authors can learn to spot.
The Anatomy of a Personalised Attack
The mechanics begin with data harvesting. Amazon author pages, Goodreads profiles, personal websites, social media accounts, and even contact forms on professional directories all serve as raw material. Scammers, or more precisely the large language models they deploy, scrape these sources to construct emails that feel uncannily specific. Children's book author Jonathan Emmett received one in July 2025, headed “Your book Sky Boy really caught my eye!” The message arrived via his website's contact form, ostensibly from a woman calling herself “Jess Amon.” It contained enough surface-level detail to seem plausible, yet it also asked whether Sky Boy was his first children's book, a question anyone who had actually visited his website could have answered in seconds.
That gap between apparent sophistication and actual knowledge is the signature of AI-assisted fraud. The technology excels at generating plausible prose from minimal input. Feed it a book title, an Amazon blurb, and a Goodreads review, and it will produce a paragraph of praise that reads as though the sender spent an afternoon with the manuscript. Feed it nothing beyond a name and genre, and the cracks appear almost immediately. Emmett ran several of the emails he received through AI content detectors; some returned scores of 100 per cent AI-generated text.
The Authors Guild, which represents more than 13,000 writers in the United States, has documented the pipeline in considerable detail. Scammers' AI tools scan Amazon listings for recently published titles, pull blurbs and review excerpts, and generate initial outreach emails within minutes. One theory circulating among publishing watchdogs is that the bots monitor Goodreads for fresh reviews, using those reviews as the basis for the first email's flattering commentary. The result is a message that appears to reference the book's themes, characters, or prose style, but which, on closer inspection, merely paraphrases publicly available marketing copy. The Society of Authors has noted that the AI used to draft these messages may have illegally scraped authors' published works, which would explain how some scammers are able to include references to specific character arcs or thematic elements.
Anne R. Allen, a veteran author and writing blogger who has tracked these scams since mid-2025, estimates she has received more than a thousand such emails. She describes the deluge as “proliferating like Tribbles,” the self-replicating creatures from Star Trek, and suspects that the number of active scam operations now vastly exceeds the number of authors they target. “There may be 10, 20, or even 30 times as many scammers as there are authors,” she wrote in a November 2025 update on her blog. Allen has become something of an inadvertent expert on the phenomenon, partly because her email address has been assigned to at least seven different authors by scammers' faulty data matching. She regularly receives emails praising novels about Guernsey, studies of the Weimar Republic, and invitations to Paris eyewear exhibitions, none of which have anything to do with her actual writing.
The Emotional Architecture of the Con
The most effective author scams do not begin with suspicious links or clumsy language. They begin by triggering emotion. Scammers understand, with a precision that borders on the clinical, that authors are deeply invested in their work and frequently navigating uncertainty around marketing, visibility, and reader engagement. The period leading up to a book's publication is particularly dangerous: authors vacillate between the hope that the fruit of their labour will reach the bestseller lists and the dread that it will disappear into the vast ocean of published titles. When a scammer taps into that emotional vulnerability, normal caution can temporarily shut down.
The flattering AI-generated emails exploit this dynamic with ruthless efficiency. They arrive with subject lines that promise recognition (“Your novel deeply moved our editorial team”) and opening paragraphs that offer the one thing most authors crave: evidence that someone has actually read their book. The praise is almost always generic enough to apply to any work of fiction or non-fiction, yet specific enough, thanks to scraped metadata, to feel personal. Authors who are not vigilant about the mechanics of the publishing industry can find themselves several emails deep into a conversation before the financial request surfaces.
The emotional manipulation extends beyond flattery. Some scams create urgency (“This opportunity is available only until the end of the month”), while others invoke exclusivity (“Your title was selected from more than 10,000 submissions”). The book club variant, which proliferated throughout late 2025, promised access to reading groups with thousands or even hundreds of thousands of members who would provide reviews and exposure, asking only for a modest “tip” of $25 per member or an “administrative fee” of a few hundred dollars. The numbers are calculated to seem reasonable relative to the promised exposure, yet they add up quickly across hundreds of targeted authors.
The Spoofed Domain Playbook
If the flattering email is the opening gambit, the spoofed domain is the closing trap. Impersonation scams, according to Writer Beware, now represent more than half of all questions and complaints the organisation receives. The technique is deceptively simple: register a domain that is almost, but not quite, identical to a legitimate publisher, agency, or industry body, then use it to send emails that carry the visual authority of the real thing.
The examples are instructive. In one documented case, scammers registered the domain “hgbusa.com,” a near-perfect match for the real “hbgusa.com” belonging to Hachette Book Group USA. In another, the email address @dcl-agency.com mimicked DCL Literary's genuine @dclagency.com, differing only by a single hyphen. A fraudulent Celadon Books email domain was registered just months before being deployed, a timeline that would make no sense for an imprint that has existed since 2017. Authors have reported receiving emails appearing to come from Penguin Random House, only to discover on close inspection that an apparent “m” in the domain name was actually a deceptively arranged “rn.” These are not random errors; they are calculated bets that busy, hopeful authors will not scrutinise the sender's address character by character.
The problem has grown severe enough that every Big Five publisher now maintains dedicated fraud alert pages. Hachette Book Group warns that scammers “frequently impersonate HBG employees in email, on social media, and on the phone to deceive authors into thinking HBG is interested in publishing their manuscripts.” Penguin Random House's Corporate Information Security Team has flagged “several phishing schemes in which employees at PRH and other publishing-industry companies are being impersonated to target authors and agents.” Simon and Schuster confirms that “third parties unaffiliated with Simon and Schuster have been impersonating Simon and Schuster employees, literary agents, and providers of other literary services.” The uniformity of these warnings across the industry tells its own story.
In February 2026, Victoria Strauss published one of her most detailed investigations to date, deconstructing a scam that impersonated Simon and Schuster. The fraudsters used the email address “simonschusterllc4@gmail.com,” a choice that combined the publisher's name with a free email service that no Big Five house would ever use for professional correspondence. Strauss, who has been investigating publishing scams for more than two decades through Writer Beware's partnership with the Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers Association, decided to engage the scammers directly.
She submitted three chapters of what she described as an “unmarketable trunk novel” donated by a friend specifically for investigative purposes. The response was swift and enthusiastic. Within hours, the fake Simon and Schuster offered a publishing deal complete with a $500,000 advance, a comprehensive “publishing plan” covering developmental editing, global distribution, audiobook production, and marketing strategy, and breathless prose about the manuscript's commercial potential. The plan was elaborate, running to several pages, and clearly designed to overwhelm with detail.
Then came the pivot. The conversation shifted from traditional publishing to self-publishing packages, with prices ranging from $1,500 to $15,000. Wire transfer instructions directed payments to an account under the name “Ezekiel Ayomiposi Adepitan” at Wells Fargo in Delaware. Email headers revealed a timezone offset of +0100, consistent with West Africa rather than the East Coast of the United States.
“A Big 5 publisher would be emailing from their own web domain, not a Gmail address,” Strauss noted. The observation is obvious in retrospect, yet the scam's elaborate staging is designed to ensure that retrospect arrives too late.
The Book-to-Film Grift
No variant of the author scam has proved more financially devastating than the book-to-film scheme. In January 2025, a federal grand jury in the Southern District of California indicted three individuals connected to PageTurner, Press and Media LLC, a Chula Vista-based company that the FBI estimates defrauded more than 800 authors of at least $44 million between 2017 and 2024.
The defendants were Gemma Traya Austin of Chula Vista, and Michael Cris Traya Sordilla and Bryan Navales Tarosa, both of the Philippines. Sordilla is Austin's nephew. The operation worked through Innocentrix Philippines, a business process outsourcing company whose employees contacted authors through unsolicited calls and emails, claiming that publishers and Hollywood studios were interested in acquiring their books. Victims were told they needed to pay for treatments, scripts, logline synopses, pitch decks, and sizzle reels before their material could be optioned. Individual losses ranged from $7,000 to $35,000, with the Authors Guild reporting awareness of at least one victim who lost $800,000.
Federal authorities seized more than $5.8 million from multiple bank accounts, including $3.5 million from PageTurner's business account and nearly $905,000 from Austin's personal account. All three defendants face charges of conspiracy to commit mail and wire fraud and money laundering conspiracy, carrying maximum sentences of 20 years in prison.
Strauss described PageTurner's model as “a type of pig butchering scam, where victims are tricked into handing over their assets via escalating demands for money.” The terminology, borrowed from cryptocurrency fraud, is apt. Each payment creates a sunk-cost psychology that makes the next payment feel more rational, not less. The scam does not end when the author runs out of patience; it ends when the author runs out of money. One documented case illustrates the mechanics with painful clarity: a self-published author was contacted by someone claiming to be a Hachette employee who said an agent had given him a copy of her book. She paid this individual more than $14,000 for purported “printing” and other fees, and even flew from California to Hachette's New York office, where no one had heard of her or her book.
The PageTurner operation was unusually large, but the model persists under different names. Writer Beware has tracked iterations operating as “Motionflick Studios” and “Snow Day Film,” both of which send unsolicited emails claiming interest in film adaptations, name-dropping real Hollywood figures without their knowledge or consent, then referring authors to services that charge thousands of dollars for materials no legitimate producer would ever request. In a grim coda to the PageTurner arrests, authors who had been defrauded reported receiving calls from a “US Literary Law Firm” offering “representation” for victims in exchange for a fee of $1,200. The law firm did not exist. The secondary scam was targeting the victims of the primary one.
The fundamental rule is straightforward: in a genuine film deal, the production company pays the author for rights, not the other way around. Yet the emotional architecture of the scam, the appeal to an author's fantasy of seeing their work on screen, consistently overrides this logic.
Celebrity Impersonation and the Trust Chain
A particularly insidious variant involves scammers impersonating well-known authors. Writer Beware has documented cases involving fake accounts purporting to be Suzanne Collins, Stephen King, Brandon Sanderson, Danielle Steel, Colson Whitehead, Claire Keegan, Cixin Liu, and numerous others. The pattern follows a predictable sequence: a friendly initial message praising the target's writing, a series of exchanges that build rapport (often sustained by generative AI, making the conversation semi-automated), and eventually a referral to a paid service for editing, marketing, or representation.
In one documented variant, the fake famous author recommends the target to their “literary agent,” who then requests a manuscript submission and offers representation, conditional on the manuscript first undergoing professional editing. The target is directed to a fake editor, often operating under a generic name, who demands $700 to $800 via PayPal, with payments traced to accounts in Nigeria. In an alternative version, the impersonator skips the agent intermediary entirely and connects the writer directly with a fake book marketer requiring upfront payment.
Science fiction author John Scalzi reported in January 2026 that three times in a single week he received inquiries from other authors about emails sent from an account impersonating him. The messages praised the recipients' books in what Scalzi described as “AI-generated fashion” and attempted to initiate an exchange that would ultimately lead to a financial request. Scalzi, who writes the popular blog Whatever, was blunt in his assessment: “Every single one of these emails is absolutely a scam, none of these promoters and/or book clubs are real.” The impact extended beyond financial fraud; Scalzi announced an indefinite hiatus from book club engagements because it had become “exponentially more difficult to suss out legitimate convention and book festival invitations and paid speaking gigs from a sea of AI-generated asks.”
Author Evelyn Skye discovered that her own identity had been weaponised when she learned that scammers had created fake social media accounts using her author photo and content lifted from her legitimate profiles. The accounts were sophisticated enough to fool authors who were not already familiar with Skye's actual online presence.
Even Writer Beware itself has not been spared. In November 2024, Strauss reported a new impersonation attempt in which someone posed as her, eventually requesting a $1,000 fee from a writer. Digital forensics pointed to Innocentrix, the same Philippines-based operation connected to the PageTurner indictment.
The Numbers Behind the Noise
The author-targeting scam epidemic exists within a broader landscape of AI-enabled fraud that has grown exponentially. According to threat intelligence data compiled by cybersecurity firms throughout 2025, AI-enabled fraud surged by 1,210 per cent, with fraud losses from generative AI projected to rise from $12.3 billion in 2024 to $40 billion by 2027, a compound annual growth rate of 32 per cent.
The phishing statistics are equally striking. Research published by Cofense found that 82.6 per cent of phishing emails now incorporate some form of AI-generated content, with more than 90 per cent of polymorphic attacks (those that vary their content to evade detection filters) leveraging large language models. AI-generated phishing emails achieve click-through rates more than four times higher than their human-crafted equivalents. A campaign documented by Brightside AI, which targeted 800 accounting firms with AI-generated emails referencing specific state registration details, achieved a 27 per cent click rate, far above the industry average for phishing attempts. The technique is described as “polymorphic” phishing: attacks that appear new and unique on surface indicators but share the same underlying infrastructure.
The implications for authors are significant. Traditional red flags (the misspelled words, the awkward syntax, the obviously generic greetings) have been largely eliminated by AI. Scammers whose first language is not English can now produce emails that read as fluent, professional correspondence. Strauss has observed that while grammar and syntax errors have become much less common in initial emails, they may still surface “if the scammer goes off script,” for instance during a live chat or phone call where the AI layer is thinner.
This creates a paradox: the better the technology gets at mimicking legitimate communication, the more authors must rely on structural and contextual cues rather than surface-level language quality. The question is no longer “Does this email look professional?” but “Does this opportunity make sense?”
Detectable Inconsistencies and Validation Failures
Despite the sophistication of AI-generated prose, the scams remain riddled with structural weaknesses that function as reliable indicators of fraud. These can be organised into several categories.
The first and most reliable is the email domain. Legitimate publishers, agents, and production companies use their own corporate domains. Gmail, Yahoo, Outlook, and other free email services are immediate red flags when attached to communications purporting to come from established industry entities. The fake Simon and Schuster used a Gmail address. The fake famous author accounts consistently operate through Gmail. Penguin Random House has specifically flagged “penguinrandomhousellc@gmail.com” as a known fraudulent address, noting that its official domains are @penguinrandomhouse.com and @prh.com. This single check would eliminate a substantial proportion of scam attempts.
The second category involves temporal implausibility. Legitimate publishing processes move slowly. A major publisher does not discover an unknown author's self-published book, read it, prepare a detailed publishing plan, and offer a $500,000 advance within 24 hours. The speed of the response is itself evidence of fraud. In Strauss's Simon and Schuster investigation, the entire cycle from submission to offer took less than a day, a timeline that would be physically impossible in traditional publishing, where manuscript evaluation alone typically requires weeks or months.
The third category is financial directionality. In legitimate publishing, money flows from publisher to author, not the reverse. In legitimate film deals, the production company acquires rights from the author. In legitimate literary representation, agents earn commission on sales rather than charging upfront fees. Any request for payment from an author, whether framed as an “administrative fee,” a “marketing investment,” or a “printing cost,” inverts the normal financial relationship and should trigger immediate scepticism. The amounts demanded vary widely, from the $25 “tips” requested by fake book clubs to the $15,000 self-publishing packages offered by fake Simon and Schuster, to the $35,000 extracted by PageTurner for non-existent film deals.
The fourth category involves verifiable identity. When a communication claims to originate from a known entity, verification is often possible through a single independent action: visiting the entity's official website, calling the publicly listed phone number, or checking the contact information published on professional directories. Simon and Schuster maintains an official fraud alert page. Penguin Random House has constructed dedicated telephone and email support for authors who suspect they have been targeted. Hachette Book Group publishes cybersecurity guidance specifically for authors. The Authors Guild publishes a regularly updated list of known scams. These resources exist specifically because the volume of fraud has made them necessary.
The fifth category is contextual incongruity. The fake “Jess Amon” who contacted Jonathan Emmett asked whether Sky Boy was his first children's book, a question rendered absurd by five seconds of research. The scam emails that Anne R. Allen receives frequently reference books she did not write, because scammers' AI tools have confused her with other people named Anne Allen. When an email from a supposed agent or editor contains praise that could apply to literally any book in the genre, the personalisation is performative rather than genuine. These errors reveal the limits of automated personalisation: the AI can generate convincing prose, but it cannot always verify the accuracy of the data it has been fed.
Defensive Practices and Verification Workflows
The author community has, through painful collective experience, developed a set of defensive practices that significantly reduce vulnerability. The most effective of these are not technological but procedural, rooted in an understanding of how the publishing industry actually operates.
The first principle, articulated consistently by the Authors Guild, Writer Beware, and experienced authors, is that unsolicited offers should be treated as fraudulent until independently verified. Nathan Bransford, a former literary agent turned writing adviser, summarised the position in a January 2025 blog post: legitimate publishing professionals rarely approach unknown authors out of the blue, and when they do, they never require upfront payment. The Authors Guild's guidance is similarly direct: “The first rule of thumb is that if someone solicits you out of the blue with an offer that seems too good to be true, it probably is.”
The second principle involves independent verification through official channels. If an email claims to come from Simon and Schuster, the author should visit simonandschuster.com directly (not through any link in the email) and use the contact information published there. If an “agent” claims to represent a known agency, the author should check the agency's official website for that individual's name. Penguin Random House advises authors to “ask them to send an email from their PRH address, and be sceptical if they give an excuse for not doing so.” This takes minutes and eliminates most impersonation attempts.
The third principle is community-based intelligence sharing. Writer Beware, operated by Victoria Strauss in partnership with the Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers Association, functions as the publishing industry's most sustained investigative presence, tracking scams and deceptive operations for more than two decades. The organisation maintains an impersonation list that catalogues known spoofed entities, including the specific email domains used. Known fraudulent domains associated with agent impersonation scams include @groupofacquisitions.com, @directacquisitionsteam.com, @literaryacquisitionsguild.com, @literaryendorsement.com, and @literarytraditionalendorsement.com. The Authors Guild publishes scam alerts and offers direct support to members who have received suspicious communications. Authors can report suspected scams to Writer Beware at beware@sfwa.org or to the Authors Guild at staff@authorsguild.org.
The fourth principle is pattern recognition through education. The Authors Guild's guidance emphasises that the single most effective defence is understanding how the publishing industry works. Authors who know that legitimate agents earn commission rather than charging fees, that major publishers acquire through agents rather than cold emails, and that film producers pay for rights rather than requesting pitch materials, are substantially harder to defraud. The scams succeed precisely because they target authors who lack this knowledge, often first-time or self-published writers navigating an unfamiliar industry.
John Scalzi has advocated for what amounts to a zero-trust policy: “When someone proactively reaches out to you, you have to assume it's fake until you can prove otherwise.” This approach, while potentially causing authors to miss rare legitimate opportunities, reflects the current reality that the signal-to-noise ratio in author inboxes has deteriorated to the point where assuming legitimacy is no longer rational.
For authors who have already engaged with a suspected scam, the FBI maintains a dedicated contact address at AuthorFraud@fbi.gov, established in connection with the PageTurner investigation. The National Elder Fraud Hotline (1-833-FRAUD-11) provides additional support, reflecting the disproportionate targeting of older authors by these operations.
The Structural Paradox of AI-Assisted Fraud
There is an irony at the heart of the AI scam epidemic that targeting authors reveals with particular clarity. The same technology that makes the emails more polished also makes them more generic. The same automation that allows scammers to contact thousands of authors simultaneously prevents them from doing the one thing that would make their approaches truly convincing: actually reading the books.
This is the structural paradox of AI-assisted fraud. It can produce prose that passes a cursory inspection, but it cannot generate genuine engagement with an author's work. It can scrape Amazon for a book's blurb, but it cannot discuss a specific scene. It can generate a publishing plan that runs to several pages, but it cannot explain why a particular manuscript would appeal to a particular audience in terms that reflect actual market knowledge. The sophistication is real, but it is shallow. It operates at the level of surface plausibility rather than substantive understanding.
This shallowness is, for now, the author's best defence. An email that praises your “masterful exploration of the human condition” without referencing a single character, scene, or argument is almost certainly generated by software that has never encountered your work beyond its metadata. A publishing offer that arrives within hours of submission is operating on a timeline that only makes sense if nobody actually read the manuscript. A film producer who requires you to pay for a sizzle reel has fundamentally misrepresented the economics of the entertainment industry.
The scam layer, in other words, is sophisticated enough to get through the door but not sophisticated enough to survive sustained scrutiny. The challenge for the author community is to ensure that scrutiny becomes reflexive, embedded in the culture of publishing as a standard operating procedure rather than an afterthought. Organisations such as Writer Beware and the Authors Guild have spent decades building the infrastructure for exactly this kind of collective defence. The question is whether that infrastructure can scale as fast as the scams.
The data suggest it will need to. With AI-enabled fraud growing at a compound annual rate of 32 per cent, and phishing attacks achieving click-through rates four times higher than their pre-AI equivalents, the volume and velocity of author-targeting scams will only increase. The technology will improve. The emails will become more convincing. The spoofed domains will become harder to distinguish from the real thing.
But the fundamental structure of the scam will remain: the demand for money flowing in the wrong direction, the implausible timelines, the unverifiable identities, the gap between surface polish and substantive knowledge. These are not bugs in the scam's design; they are features of its economics. Fraud that does not eventually request payment is not fraud. Deception that can withstand full verification is not deception aimed at volume targets. The scam layer is, by its nature, a structure that appears solid from a distance but collapses under pressure.
The task for authors is to apply that pressure early and consistently. The tools exist. The knowledge is available. The community is organised. What remains is the discipline to use them, especially when the email in your inbox is telling you exactly what you want to hear.
References and Sources
- A New AI Scam Is Targeting Thousands of Authors. I Was One of Them – The Hollywood Reporter
- Not Simon & Schuster: Deconstructing an Impersonation Scam – Writer Beware
- The Impersonation List – Writer Beware
- If a Famous Author Calls, Hang Up: Anatomy of an Impersonation Scam – Writer Beware
- Wolves in Authors' Clothing: Beware Social Media Marketing Scams – Writer Beware
- Dogging the Watchdog Redux: Someone Else is Impersonating Writer Beware
- Two New Impersonation Scams to Watch For – Writer Beware
- From Motionflick Studios to Snow Day Film: The Evolution of a Book-to-Film Scam – Writer Beware
- Three Indicted and Internet Domain Seized in $44 Million Nationwide Book Publishing Scam – US Department of Justice
- Karma's a Bitch: The Law Catches Up With PageTurner Press and Media – Writer Beware
- FBI Arrests Individuals Behind PageTurner Scam – The Authors Guild
- Publishing Scam Alerts – The Authors Guild
- Avoiding Publishing Scams – The Authors Guild
- Yes, All Those Author Services and Book Club Emails Are Fake – John Scalzi, Whatever
- Reminder: Scammers Are Out There Pretending to Be Me – John Scalzi, Whatever
- A Sad Commentary on the State of Writer-Related Spam – John Scalzi, Whatever
- Update on Those Flattering AI Book Marketing Scams – Anne R. Allen
- Those Flattering Emails Filling Your Inbox: An AI Scam – Anne R. Allen
- The Hidden World of Writing Scams – Anne R. Allen
- AUTHORS BEWARE! If You Receive a Flattering Email About Your Book, It May Be Written by an AI – Jonathan Emmett
- Publishing Scams Are Rampant: How to Be Vigilant – Nathan Bransford
- Simon & Schuster Fraud Alert
- Combatting Fraud – Penguin Random House
- Identifying Impersonation Phishing Scams – Penguin Random House News for Authors
- Fraud Alert – Hachette Book Group
- Author Impersonation and Other Scams – Evelyn Skye
- AI-Generated Phishing vs Human Attacks: 2025 Risk Analysis – Brightside AI
- How AI Made Scams More Convincing in 2025 – Malwarebytes
- The Rise of AI-Powered Phishing 2025 – CybelAngel
- Guest Post: How a Book Really Becomes a Movie – Writer Beware
- Authors Hit with Deluge of Scam Emails from Fake Marketers – The Bookseller
- PageTurner's $44 Million Fraud Charges Cast Spotlight on Author Services – Bloomberg

Tim Green UK-based Systems Theorist & Independent Technology Writer
Tim explores the intersections of artificial intelligence, decentralised cognition, and posthuman ethics. His work, published at smarterarticles.co.uk, challenges dominant narratives of technological progress while proposing interdisciplinary frameworks for collective intelligence and digital stewardship.
His writing has been featured on Ground News and shared by independent researchers across both academic and technological communities.
ORCID: 0009-0002-0156-9795 Email: tim@smarterarticles.co.uk








