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No matter .. how tech savvy they are, anyone can fall victim to a scam
I don't carry or use a debit card for anything other than paying the tax bill at the end of the year. For all payments I use credit cards. A few times there have been fraudulent transactions, but these have been quickly flagged up and wiped off. Recently I had to reclaim £500 under Section 75 for some flights -- can't do that on a debit card.
Friend of mine is in CID and does a lot with credit card scams and skimming. One of their favourites was working out that some stolen card details had been used on Groupon to buy a massage. Popped down to the establishment, got the Groupon voucher put on an alert list. The proprietor called them up when the voucher was used to book a treatment. My friend turned up before the appointment time and just looked like a punter waiting in line. Perp was nicked as soon as they identified themselves to the staff.
I've not yet fallen for a scam but I have had my card skimmed about a decade ago and used to withdraw cash in Thailand. Bank noticed before I did on account of them considering it implausible that I'd be in Thailand and in a petrol station in Surrey at the same time. I know exactly where my card got skimmed (a different petrol station in Surrey) but I couldn't prove it.
Nah, never been scammed.But growing up with computers in the 90s, and continuing to be heavily involved with them since, I can sniff out a tech scam like a bloodhound.
I feel bad for the two groups of people who I assume are most likely to fall victim to them;
a) old people who never caught on to computers, and basically don't know how any of it works
b) younger people who have grown up with the details blissfully abstracted away from them. They get an email from 'Currys PC World' about a prize they've won, and they have no idea that what's in the 'from' section isn't even an email address - and even if they did, you have to jump through hoops on a phone to actually get the header. A lot of them don't know what a URL is - they just put 'blahblah' into Google and click the first link, and a good percentage probably don't know what a file is either, other than athing on their phone. A relative of mine fell for the classic DVLA scam of searching for 'sorn car', clicking the advert at the top and paying £50 for the privilege, because they have no idea what a URL is. And I've noticed adverts/govt notices are aware of this and even advertise to 'search for xxxx on the web' instead of 'go to www.blahblah.gov.uk', which doesn't help.
I nearly fell for the delivery scam, as with others have a lot of deliveries, but I was too tight to pay. I started to fill in some personal details and then thought 'feck you, I ain't paying, I'll cancel and re-order'.
But I discovered nothing else but depraved, excessive superstition. Pliny the younger
I don't think I've ever been scammed though I have noticed incorrect CC transactions and had to report them a couple of times, that the bank didn't pick up.
I have probably come fairly close a few times, like the first time I saw one of those very convincing DHL/DPD type same emails where it all looks normal until you notice the URL is www.dpd.scam.co.uk, because I always hover over an URL before clicking. Those are the ones that worry me because even a lot of tech-savvy people could miss it.
I've had one of those "we know your password is 'ILoveFishCakes' and will be releasing your details unless you pay" and was quite concerned, until I twigged all it means is they found a compromised email/password in a crack database online.
Scammers are getting smarter and I totally agree anyone could be caught, it only takes a momentary lapse.
Long time ago I did find out that mortgage payments were coming out of a savings account but think that was just a cock up rather than fraud. Bank soon stopped it and put the money back.
These days I always check my accounts and credit card every month to see if anything unexpected.
I fell for a scam site top of the Google list for renewing a passport. Paid them £50 or whatever it was but turns out all they did was apply on my behalf. I then needed to pay the actual fee with the real passport office. I always check for the gov.uk in the web address now.
I agree it's ridiculous that Google and Facebook allow so many scam adverts. Particularly Facebook selling dodgy investments and the like. If I can spot them a mile off they could easily remove them with an algorithm. They're complicit in scamming folk.
Think wider.
For Passports and the DVLA, the scam wasn't charging you £50 to fill the form out on your behalf. The scam was: now they have your full passport details, including name, address history, National Insurance code, and other personal details that can be used for identity theft. They've also now got valid payment details for you, unless you cancel it, meaning they can add that into the mix when paying for some expensive item online using your billing details but deliver to another address.
This can also include extracting money into cryptocurrency. Russia and China are very involved in these scam websites, as they are so profitable in terms of crypto and personal details. They're getting the personal details for very little effort on their part.
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