A ZeroFox pre-event intelligence assessment warned of a surge in ticket, accommodation and travel-package scams tied to Super Bowl LX, noting actors are using stolen personal data and AI tools to craft convincing frauds. The report advised buying only via official channels and cautioned that leaked customer data and high demand make attendees prime targets.

ZeroFox published an intelligence assessment highlighting elevated risk of ticketing and hospitality fraud in the run-up to Super Bowl LX, identifying fake resale sites, cloned vendor pages and malicious QR-code or payment lures as key threats. The report draws attention to threat actors increasingly combining stolen personally identifiable information with AI-generated content to produce realistic seller profiles, automated chat interactions and convincing counterfeit listings at scale. Event-driven demand and widely circulated customer data create a fertile environment for high-volume social-engineering operations that can siphon large sums quickly and evict attendees from legitimate bookings. ZeroFox urged consumers to purchase tickets and hospitality packages only through official league channels, verified vendors and established travel partners, and recommended basic protections such as verifying seller credentials, checking domain authenticity, using secure payment methods and enabling fraud alerts. The assessment also encouraged event organizers and vendor platforms to bolster monitoring for cloned pages and to apply AI-detection and anomaly controls, stressing that proactive measures can reduce successful exploitation of leaked data during major events.