
Supermarket Vouchers For Free?
One of the regular occurring scams is back, being spread mostly by WhatsApp at the moment but likely to be popping up on other platforms like Facebook and Twitter Read more
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One of the regular occurring scams is back, being spread mostly by WhatsApp at the moment but likely to be popping up on other platforms like Facebook and Twitter Read more
A recent Which? shoes how easy it is to fake text messages as being from your bank or credit card company. In the report the journalist along with ‘ethical hacker’ Scott Mcgready are able to create and send convincing fake emails that show up alongside genuine text messages from a bank. Read more
After any major incident, many people turn to the internet to find out more information and to see if there is any way in which they can help. The majority of us will be shocked by tragic events as we see them unfold, more so when the incident is closer to home.
Unfortunately, the fraudsters know this, and don’t look at these events with sympathy, but look at them as an opportunity to scam people. Make it second nature to verify the sources of information you share, think before you click.
Scams that crop up after an incident can vary and take on many forms. They can be from people just out to harvest ‘likes’ by creating and sharing memes or making up stories about fictitious people ‘who were there’ when it happened, or they can be criminals out to pinch your bank details.
Often, the fraudsters will use social media to share a photo with a sentimental message or outraged caption, and will use any tactics then can to pull on your heart strings to get you to forward or re-share the post.
Expect them to exploit photos of affected people and paint sad stories to get you to hand over your money.
Use some common sense when deciding if a link you’re about to click is genuine.
We can help you sort the truth from the lies, and show you how to identify fraudulent emails and links. We can even configure and install hardware designed to filter out the fake news.
You may have seen posts with status messages along the lines of:
And a photo of someone showing a disability or with a disfiguration or medical condition, encouraging you to share the post because no one else will. But these posts are fake and demeaning to the people featured in the photos.
The posts suggest the person in the photo is the original poster and that you, as the reader, are ashamed of them because of their background or disability. It suggests that you help them by sharing the post, liking, and possibly also typing some message or word underneath.
The posts are fake, they are designed to make you feel emotionally involved to increase user interaction. They are conning unsuspecting, kind-hearted Facebook users into interacting with the posts (sharing, commenting and liking) out of shame and pity.
If you come across one of these posts, you should block and report the page using the arrow on the top right of the shared post (be careful here not to block and report your friend by mistake!) If you don’t feel confident in reporting the page as spam, then just ignore the post.
The photos used on these posts (some of them are edited before posting to make it look like they have a missing limb) are stolen from Facebook profiles, Flickr groups or other photo sharing sites and used without permission from the person featured in them.
The posts are disrespectful to the person in them, and in sharing the photo you are unsuspectingly spreading the hurt they cause the victim.
The posters have only one interest in mind, to promote themselves on Facebook at the cost of the poor victims in their posts. Their goal is to get as many people to share and comment on their horrid posts.
Facebook calls this kind of interaction ‘organic’ and the more organic shares, likes and comments a page can generate, the more popular Facebook considers it to be. This helps promote the page on Facebook, and once they have all this ‘positive’ organic feedback, they can then use the page for other uses, like promoting hate speech, trying to distort the ‘now trending’ section on Facebook with their own agenda, and possibly spreading links to other similar Facebook pages and websites.
If you need help with using social media, and in spotting fake and spammy content, we are involved in a free-to-attend drop-in IT training session where you can find out how to be more social on social media. Contact us for information, or head along to the Hub at Ashmore Park, Wednesfield on a Wednesday between 10am – 1pm.
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tinsleyNET IT Services Consultant
IT Support for small to medium or large sized businesses, home office workers and home users
across the UK based in the West Midlands and Shropshire.
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