this post was submitted on 19 Mar 2025
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Beware. I am glad that I was informed by the news that these kinds of chats may be a new scam tactic, especially when someone we do not know well messages us for the first time. As you can see, this account hasn't replied to anything, giving me the impression that this is indeed a scam tactic.

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[–] foggy 31 points 9 hours ago* (last edited 9 hours ago) (1 children)

Scams are purposely crafted with levels of sophistication to target specific levels of tech literacy.

Not saying you did, but just for all reading, never assume you're too tech savvy to get scammed. That thought is scammers literal bread and butter. Stay vigilant and curious.

[–] kaerypheur 14 points 9 hours ago (3 children)

it’s true that even smart people fall for well-crafted social engineering.

[–] [email protected] 7 points 6 hours ago

I consider myself technically apt.

I was expecting a parcel from abroad so was expecting to have to pay customs.
Received an SMS that looked fairly legit, from a named SMS number that didn't set off an alarm bell, asking for additional information. The only red flag that got me were some unusually personal questions, like date of birth. I was close to giving away a bunch of personal details.

Another one was a "your parking permit is about to expire". We recently had permitted parking introduced, and I figured I'd messed something up. But thankfully I looked into that via the councils parking permit page, and knew I was months away from an expiry.

My parents received a "help, I've flushed my phone down the toilet and need a new one for work tomorrow. Sorry for the strange number, I've borrowed a friend's phone. Can you send me $$$ to [account details] so I can get a new phone?" from a scammer pretending to be my sister.
Apparently they made it up to a "this is a new account number, are you sure this isn't a scam?" prompt in their banking app when they finally decided to try and contact her. She immediately picked up and said "stop, it's a scam".

It doesn't take much to make you vulnerable to social engineering.
An expectation of events and something that would normally red flag suddenly doesn't seem suspicious.
An emotional manipulation, time pressure, all that stuff, and it's easy to ignore red flags.

I always say "if you ever feel pressure, take a moment and analyse the situation". Time pressure, emotional pressure. And analyse looking for anything that seems odd, then pick at that thread.

[–] [email protected] 8 points 8 hours ago

I have a relative that, while working as a police detective specializing in fraud, lost a lot of money in a Ponzi scheme. It was his belief that he would always be able to tell if something was a scam that sunk him. Definitely embarrassing, but it always reminds me that anyone can be scammed by the right offer.

[–] [email protected] -5 points 8 hours ago* (last edited 8 hours ago) (1 children)

This is by no means well crafted though, it's honestly so low effort I'm surprised if it works at all.

[–] foggy 6 points 8 hours ago

You missed the point.