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7 Scams Even The Smartest People Fall For by Nobody: 11:33pm On Dec 18, 2019 |
Not so long ago, you were considered a savvy internet user if you ignored unsolicited emails from princes in faraway lands. Now the distinction between what’s a scam and what’s a legitimate online business is not so cut and dry. From phishing schemes disguised to lure you into a fraudulent website with innocent-looking bait to malware hidden in Wi-Fi hotspots, here are seven internet scams that even the smartest people fall for. 1. THE FAKE SOCIAL NETWORK EMAIL How it works: This phishing scheme involves receiving a fraudulent email that looks like it came from your actual social network. It may say you have new, urgent notifications or that someone is erroneously trying to access your account and you need to sign in to verify information. Click on the link in the email and you are directed to a fake website. If you sign in on that page, scammers can then hack into your real account and steal your identity, sending out spam messages to your family and friends and using personal information to blackmail you. How to avoid it: If there are notifications you need to see on your social network, visit that page directly by typing the Web address into the URL bar or opening the network’s app on your phone. Do not click on links that are emailed to you. And set up two-step verification on all of your accounts so that if someone tries to sign into your account from a non-trusted computer, you get a notification texted to you. 2. THE UNEXPECTED ATTACHMENT How it works: Scammers access one of your associates’ email accounts or social networks and send out fake emails or direct messages to all of his or her contacts. They often include an attachment or a link to a fraudulent file-sharing website and ask you to download a file from there. If you download the files, they spread destructive malware on your computer, locking down all of the legitimate files on your device and holding it for ransom. How to avoid it: If you receive an unexpected attachment or link to a file-sharing website from a contact, do not open it. Instead, reach out to that contact directly—preferably via another channel than how you received it, in case they have been hacked—and ask what the file is and if he or she intended to send it. 3. THE UNEXPECTED FRIEND REQUEST How it works: A scammer duplicates a social network profile belonging to a friend and then adds you. Once you confirm, the con artist has access to personal information that can be used to hack into your bank accounts, such as your birthday, parents’ names, and pets’ names. They can also then send out malicious links that you would be tempted to click and requests for money. How to avoid it: Do not accept friend requests from strangers. If someone you are already friends with adds you as a friend, reach out to them offline and confirm whether or not they have a second account. Do not share private information that could be used to crack your bank’s security questions online. If you go out of town, wait until you return to post about it; you never know if one of your friends’ accounts is compromised. 4. THE FREE WI-FI HOTSPOT How it works: A criminal sets up an open-access Wi-Fi hotspot in a coffee shop or airport that’s connected to his or her laptop. Once you join, this person has access to your computer and mines it for financial and personal data. How to avoid it: In the settings on your computer and phone, make sure your device does not automatically join open Wi-Fi networks. Turn on the option “Ask to join new networks.” Keep your Wi-Fi turned off unless you are actively using it. If you would like to join the Wi-Fi network at a private business, ask an employee what the correct network name is before joining. If you are visiting a public place such as an airport, search the Web ahead of time to confirm the official Wi-Fi network’s name. Do not conduct financial transactions on any of these networks. If you travel frequently, invest in your own password-protected hotspot to carry with you. 5. THE POP-UP SCAREWARE How it works: As you’re browsing the Web, a pop-up window alerts you that your computer is infected with viruses and worms. It encourages you to scan your device with a specific antivirus software program and then offers to clean the bogus bugs off for a small fee. If you download the program, it installs malicious software on your device, and these con artists then have your credit card information. How to avoid it: Do not click on any links in pop-up ads. Install a robust, trusted antivirus program on your computer and run it regularly. Also install pop-up blockers on your browsers to prevent these scams from ever reaching you. Keep the important files on your computer backed up to an external drive, just in case. 6. THE TOO-GOOD-TO-BE-TRUE DATING PROFILE How it works: A con artist sets up a phony dating profile with either completely made up information or photos and data stolen from a real person. He or she lures you in with messages, photos and phone calls. But they keep backing out of meeting in person and need help paying their bills this month. If you wire them money, you never hear from them again or they keep asking for more. How to avoid it: Trust your gut. If someone keeps refusing to meet, he or she may not be real or might be interested in your wallet rather than you. Never send money to someone you met online. 7. THE HELP-SOMEONE-IN-NEED SCAM How it works: A media-savvy scam artist sets up a crowd-funding page or charity website related to a topic that is getting lots of news coverage. It could be related to a natural disaster or a viral story about a person in need. They convince people to share the link on social media and send you emails about contributing to the cause. If you click on the link and donate money using a bank card, the scam artist can steal your bank information and drain your account or sell it to others who will. How to avoid it: Don’t click on links you receive via email or those with suspicious Web addresses linked on social media. To donate to someone in need, search for the charity and go directly to its official site. Confirm that you are at the right place and it is secure—the URL should appear with a “https://” at the beginning—before handing over your bank card information. Even if you’re careful, hackers and identity thieves can still swipe your personal information, so it’s always important that you stay in the know. Discover will help you to protect your identity by monitoring thousands of risky websites and alert you if they find your social security number. And it’s free for cardmembers who sign up. It won’t solve all identity issues, but it’s a good first step to putting you in the know. Learn more at www.discover.com/freealerts. 10 Likes 2 Shares |
Re: 7 Scams Even The Smartest People Fall For by MVLOX(m): 4:14am On Dec 19, 2019 |
Nice one there.... 1 Like |
Re: 7 Scams Even The Smartest People Fall For by domido(m): 6:29am On Dec 19, 2019 |
Recently,a whole lot of persons have fallen victims to this. Thanks for this. This is promise land material oo. 1 Like 1 Share |
Re: 7 Scams Even The Smartest People Fall For by blingxx(m): 7:03am On Dec 19, 2019 |
Yahoo boys normal parole 1 Like |
Re: 7 Scams Even The Smartest People Fall For by Whitefowl: 7:45am On Dec 19, 2019 |
Thanks for this piece 2 Likes 1 Share |
Re: 7 Scams Even The Smartest People Fall For by Lekan111(m): 9:10am On Dec 19, 2019 |
After falling for a scam, you sometimes ask yourself if the scammer actually use jazz/juju. Because some will look so cheap after the deed as has been done 5 Likes |
Re: 7 Scams Even The Smartest People Fall For by yahoosurepass(m): 9:14am On Dec 19, 2019 |
Re: 7 Scams Even The Smartest People Fall For by DAVE5(m): 9:35am On Dec 19, 2019 |
Scammers everywhere 2 Likes
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Re: 7 Scams Even The Smartest People Fall For by Greatzeus(m): 10:05am On Dec 19, 2019 |
Golden Rule: Do into others what you want them to do into you. Scamming people of their money or properties is wrong,even if you are broke or jobless,many have been there and do not resort to scam. Think outside the box,start small. |
Re: 7 Scams Even The Smartest People Fall For by EzePromoe: 10:11am On Dec 19, 2019 |
Very correct, especially that number 7. I see people who beg every day on Nairaland, even if I would want to help, my past experience with scammers keeps ringing in my head. Scammers have killed human sympathy in us. 4 Likes |
Re: 7 Scams Even The Smartest People Fall For by enawt: 11:12am On Dec 19, 2019 |
Informative |
Re: 7 Scams Even The Smartest People Fall For by ValCon888: 11:17am On Dec 19, 2019 |
This is the type of topic that should make front page. An average Nigerian is smart. But these scam artists keep upgrading their game. The best way to avoid been scammed is to stay one step ahead of them. Nice post OP. 1 Like |
Re: 7 Scams Even The Smartest People Fall For by Nobody: 11:32am On Dec 19, 2019 |
Cc, Lalasticlala |
Re: 7 Scams Even The Smartest People Fall For by damtan(m): 1:54pm On Dec 19, 2019 |
The way people keep scamming is out of this world |
Re: 7 Scams Even The Smartest People Fall For by MZrapper(f): 2:03pm On Dec 19, 2019 |
I can't fall for any of these. These are cheap scams na. |
Re: 7 Scams Even The Smartest People Fall For by Roon9(m): 3:49pm On Dec 19, 2019 |
Facts only |
Re: 7 Scams Even The Smartest People Fall For by agarawu23(m): 4:02pm On Dec 19, 2019 |
Sorry op, only dull people will fall for cheap scams like this. |
Re: 7 Scams Even The Smartest People Fall For by odave: 4:17pm On Dec 19, 2019 |
@ op add snake and bobrisky to your title, it will reach fp in 5 mins Nice post, kudos |
Re: 7 Scams Even The Smartest People Fall For by Patosky4U: 7:55pm On Dec 19, 2019 |
Nice work... Most people that are victims of those guy na the ones wey d look for awoof |
Re: 7 Scams Even The Smartest People Fall For by Katier00(f): 8:00pm On Dec 19, 2019 |
MZrapper:don't be so sure ma |
Re: 7 Scams Even The Smartest People Fall For by Enosa1(m): 8:17pm On Dec 19, 2019 |
Patosky4U:Fact, there is usually an undertone of greed |
Re: 7 Scams Even The Smartest People Fall For by MrBachelor: 8:21pm On Dec 19, 2019 |
Very informative. |
Re: 7 Scams Even The Smartest People Fall For by falcon01: 10:11pm On Dec 19, 2019 |
8. Marriage |
Re: 7 Scams Even The Smartest People Fall For by Nobody: 10:12pm On Dec 19, 2019 |
Enosa1:Blame poverty too.. Poverty has deposited some mindset in an average Nigerian, which will make us to see every opportunities as a way to get out of needy state.. Or as a prayer answered/blessing/favour etc |
Re: 7 Scams Even The Smartest People Fall For by efembaba(m): 10:30pm On Dec 19, 2019 |
What about people like me who accept friend request from every Dick and Harry. And I get loads of them daily |
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