Digital Detectives – Designing Tools to Outsmart Scammers
9 – 12
September 2025
Business and Entrepreneurship
21 Days
About Project
Financial scams are getting smarter every day—fake bank calls, phishing emails, investment traps, and social media “giveaway” cons. Scammers don’t just rely on technology; they exploit human tendencies—curiosity, fear, urgency, and trust.
In this project, you’ll become a scam detective and engineer rolled into one. First, you’ll investigate how scams work: What tricks do scammers use? What vulnerabilities do they target? Why do people fall for them? Then, you’ll turn your insights into a simple, user-friendly digital tool or app that helps people spot, avoid, and block these traps.
Your solution could be a scam-alert app, a “safe checklist” before sending money, a chatbot that helps verify messages, or a browser add-on that flags suspicious links. It doesn’t need to be fully coded—students will create wireframes, clickable mock-ups, and low-code prototypes that clearly show how the tool works.
Expert Profile
Professor Maria Weber, MS, is the Program Director of the Master’s of Cybersecurity and Information Systems in the School for Professional Studies at Saint Louis University (SLU.) Professor Weber has over 25 years of industry and academic experience.
Some of her past industry experience involved multiple positions in Networking, Wireless, Security, Software-Defined Networking, Cloud Computing, and Virtualization.
