• Skip to content
  • Skip to navigation
Global site
  • Insights
    • Audit and Assurance
      • Audit and Assurance
      • Accounting Advisory
    • Business Process Outsourcing
      • Business Process Outsourcing
      • Payroll
      • Managed accounting and bookkeeping
    • Business Risk
    • Corporate Finance
    • Corporate Secretarial Services
    • CFO Advisory
      • CFO Advisory
      • Accounting Advisory
      • Crypto Accounting Advisory Service
      • ESG Reporting and Accounting
      • Expected Credit Loss
      • Finance Transformation
      • Managed Accounting and Bookkeeping Services
      • CFO as a Service
    • Cyber
    • Deals Advisory
      • Deals Advisory
      • Business Tax Advisory
      • Corporate Finance
      • Financial Due Diligence
      • Valuations
    • ESG and Sustainability Services
      • ESG and Sustainability Services
      • Sustainability with the ARC framework
    • Forensic Advisory
    • Restructuring and Insolvency
    • Tax
      • Tax
      • Business Tax Advisory
      • Corporate Tax Compliance
      • Tax Governance
      • Goods and Services Tax
      • Transfer Pricing
      • Employer Solutions
      • Private Client Services
    • Valuations
  • Meet our people
  • About us
  • Careers
    • Students and Graduates
    • Our culture
      • Our culture
      • Welfare and benefits
      • Career development
    • Experienced hires
    • Current vacancies
  • Events
Global site
  1. Home
  2. Insights
banner image

Insights

Showing 5 of 5 content results
Fighting AI with AI
Forensic advisory Fighting AI with AI
Artificial intelligence (“AI”) as a general-purpose technology, offers a wide range of opportunities across various fields. According to the IBM Global AI Adoption Index 2023, 42% of organisations surveyed have AI actively in use in their businesses and an additional 40% are currently exploring or experimenting with AI but have not deployed their models. Amid the promising capabilities of AI, organisations face a looming threat: the misuse of AI by fraudsters. The ease of access and availability of sophisticated AI models on an open-source basis exacerbates this threat.
4 min read | 16 Apr 2024
Naughty or Nice? 8 Traits of a Corporate Fraudster
Forensic Naughty or Nice? 8 Traits of a Corporate Fraudster
In the spirit of the season, we thought we’d make our own list of 8 traits gleaned from the Association of Certified Fraud Examiners (ACFE) Report to the Nations that will help you determine who makes it onto Santa’s naughty list, with a few #hashtags thrown in for good fun.
15 Dec 2020
Corporate frauds & failures in 2020
FORENSIC Corporate frauds & failures in 2020
Corporate frauds & failures in 2020
27 Oct 2020
Continuous monitoring in your own backyard
Forensic Continuous monitoring in your own backyard
Continuous monitoring is a journey. It is certainly not a sprint, but a marathon where it is necessary to regularly update and refresh in order to “stay ahead of the game”.
30 Jul 2020
The value of forensic accountants in investigations
Article The value of forensic accountants in investigations
In the art world, spotting the difference between an authentic masterpiece and an impeccably forged fake can often hinge on the minutest of details.
27 Apr 2020

CONNECT CONNECT

  • Contact us
  • Meet our people
  • Global reach
  • Subscribe

ABOUT ABOUT

  • Location
  • Careers
  • News centre

LEGAL LEGAL

  • Privacy
  • Site map
  • Disclaimer
  • Cookie policy
  • Whistleblowing
  • Cookie Preferences

Follow usFollow us

© 2025 Grant Thornton Singapore Pte Ltd - All rights reserved. “Grant Thornton” refers to the brand under which the Grant Thornton member firms provide assurance, tax and advisory services to their clients and/or refers to one or more member firms, as the context requires. Grant Thornton Singapore Pte Ltd is a member firm of Grant Thornton International Ltd (GTIL). GTIL and the member firms are not a worldwide partnership. GTIL and each member firm is a separate legal entity. Services are delivered by the member firms. GTIL does not provide services to clients. GTIL and its member firms are not agents of, and do not obligate, one another and are not liable for one another’s acts or omissions.