Despite giving us access to more information than ever before, the digital era has also made it easier for con artists to engage in fraudulent activities. They often utilize numerous tactics, such as phishing, for stealing bank account information and creating phony identities on social media to scam unsuspecting people of their money.
To contact their victims, scammers often use several communication channels, including phone, snail mail, email, and social media platforms. They’ll persuade you to trust them, and once you’re on their side, they’ll ask you for money or your personal information.
The strategies they employ to lure people are always changing. However, if you empower yourself with information about the most common types of fraud, you can safeguard yourself and others you care about.
In this blog post, we will explore the top ten most common scams the average internet user falls for.
1. Hijacking of Social Media Accounts
Con artists often use social media account hijacks to scam people by disseminating false information or pushing Ponzi schemes. They may send you messages on social media, most often Facebook, using a hacked account belonging to someone you know and communicate with in real life. Then they would attempt to get you to invest in a business by bragging that they had doubled their money by acquiring shares in a certain firm.
Some individuals fall for this scam because they have faith in the person they believe is behind the social media account through which they have been approached. The quickest and simplest way to protect yourself is to contact the account holder directly. Don’t send any personal information or make any transactions to anyone you barely know and have doubts about. The repercussions can be severe: from identity theft to loss of money.
2. Impersonation of Immigration Officers
In this case, a fraudster calls or reaches out to a person through social media claiming to be an immigration officer and stating that the documentation is incorrect. They may include private information and sensitive facts, such as your immigration status, to make the message more convincing. They would claim that if a wire transfer is not made quickly to cover any outstanding bills and erase the criminal record, then you would risk deportation or prison time. To avoid this scam, use Nuwber to find information about the caller, including their real name, email address, home address, place of employment, and more.
3. Smishing
Smishing (SMS phishing) refers to fraud performed via misleading text messages. Smishing is increasing because, according to studies, consumers check SMS messages more often than emails. To encourage you to submit sensitive information, scammers might send you a text message appearing to be from a respectable firm, charity, or bank. They often attempt to lure people into accessing malicious websites to “investigate suspicious bank or credit card charges.” Another typical method fraudsters employ is convincing individuals to give to “charitable causes,” such as battling COVID-19 or helping victims devastated by natural disasters.
4. Tech Support Scam
Sometimes, a supposedly respectable software firm representative calls the victim claiming to have identified a virus on their computer. The call recipient is then asked to pay a certain sum of money (by credit card or electronic money transfer) to remove the virus and secure the computer. In reality, there is no computer infection. The only reason a scammer is reaching out to a victim is to get hold of any personal information or to receive money.
5. Fake Checks
As part of the scam, a person could be given a check with instructions to deposit it and utilize the cash for things like “employment expenses,” “online purchases,” “mystery shopping,” and so on. Since the check is fake, the recipient is liable for any funds spent. To avoid falling prey to this, if you deposit a check into your bank account, wait to withdraw the funds when the check has cleared. This might take many weeks.
6. Investment Scam
Social media users are promoting “flipping money” methods, claiming to teach others how to transform $100 into $1,000. These scams are nothing new, yet they keep finding new victims. The presentation suggests that potential investors may leverage and exploit monetary fluctuations to transform a few hundred dollars into thousands of dollars. Con artists who take money from their victims often immediately alter their contact information or remove their social media pages so as not to be traced. Unfortunately, senior citizens are more likely to fall victim to investment scams. Older people are more likely to be less affluent, more isolated and more vulnerable, so protecting seniors from financial exploitation can be difficult. If you’re concerned for an older family member, make sure to teach them the signs of a scam to look out for.
7. Overpayment Fraud
In this type of fraud, the seller is handed a check for more than the agreed-upon amount, and the con artist instructs them to wire the difference back. If a check is returned unpaid, the victim is accountable for paying the whole amount.
8. Phishing
When someone approaches you posing as a representative from the respected institution, such as a bank or mortgage firm, with the aim to get hold of your sensitive information or login credentials, know that you are dealing with phishing. Phishing is a fraud that involves stealing someone’s sensitive details through deceit or by installing harmful software on a computer. Phishing attacks may take place on several communication channels, including email, phone, and text messages.
9. Taxation Fraud
In this case, someone impersonating a government official threatens a person with arrest, deportation, or the suspension of a driver’s license or passport unless they pay a tax due immediately. The individual might pay the tax bill by wire transfer or any other means that cannot be traced.
It is important to remember that government officials never threaten in order to receive payment. If you have encountered this type of behavior, you are most likely dealing with fraudsters whose only goal is to steal money from you.
10. Telemarketing Fraud
Any commercial transaction involving the transfer between a customer and a telemarketer or vendor, such as a cash-to-cash money transfer or funds loaded into a prepaid card, is considered “telemarketing” under the wide meaning of the word. Most times, these agreements often involve forgeries to get a “free” or “heavily reduced” vacation, prize or sweepstakes offers, or the acquisition and sale of “bargain products.”
Conclusion
Online con artists are getting more sophisticated as the internet permeates more and more aspects of people’s lives. These incidences have increased due to the expansion of email and internet communication. Internet fraudsters play on victims’ sympathies, anxiety, greed, gullibility, and ignorance. Therefore, everyone must emphasize safety precautions to protect themselves against online scammers.