• @Nuke_the_whales
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    2811 hours ago

    I got a call from “my bank” saying there was a problem with my account and if I give them my account number and details now we can resolve it. I was like "you’re the bank and you called me so you have my account number and info. What’s your name and employee number? And dude just cussed and hung up on me lol

    • @[email protected]
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      119 minutes ago

      Favorite type of scammer! Just calling out of the blue and unable to provide details beyond “Give us money!”

  • @Dicska
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    15 hours ago

    I can’t wrap my head around how people can ignore all those red flags. 2-3 days ago I just got a text from a random number about some parking fine. Not just that, but it said that that day was the last day I could get a 50% DISCOUNT on the fine. A fucking DISCOUNT! What’s next? I can use my Nectar card? Do I get a loyalty card with a stamp on it? But it’s not even the fact that I wasn’t contacted by mail, or there was no other contact given; I don’t even have a fucking car. Or a driving license in this country.

    • @[email protected]
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      12 hours ago

      I can’t wrap my head around how people can ignore all those red flags

      They use threats and urgency to pressure people into paying faster that they realise it’s a scam.

      • @[email protected]
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        143 minutes ago

        I literally, unknowingly, watched this unfold with my dad recently. He got a text along the lines of “final notice of unpaid toll from [local toll road entity], pay by end of day to avoid late payment fees” with a link.

        He (on the side, while we were all doing something else) went in, entered his drivers license info, date of birth, and credit card number to “pay” the toll.

        About 30 second after setting his phone down he just goes “shit, that was a scam, wasn’t it” and describes the text to us.

        A little bit too much trust, and a false deadline can go a long way.

    • MrsDoyle
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      24 hours ago

      Ha ha, my random text was really vague about what council had issued the bogus parking ticket. By contrast when I strayed into a bus lane one time I got a letter from my council, complete with a very clear photo of me driving my car in said bus lane. And yes, I got a discount for paying right away.

    • @[email protected]
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      36 hours ago

      Yeah that’s normal in Britain for council and government fines (as opposed to often unenforceable private parking charges). The shitty part is that if you try to dispute it they don’t put the timer on hold so you essentially play double or nothing on how strong you think your case is. Lose and you have to pay the full thing. Not bitter at all.

      • @Dicska
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        14 hours ago

        Wait, is it normal to have a discount or is it normal to only have the notification in a text message on your phone and nowhere else? Because the latter is rather worrying.

    • @syreus
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      109 hours ago

      I got a fine for not getting my bus ticket stamped in Florence, Italy. Apparently if you paid it the same day it was one price and that price doubled after a week, month, etc.

      Didn’t matter the machine failed when I stamped it because it was out of ink. I even tried to stamp it in front of the officer. He said I could appeal it in person in court. They know tourists aren’t going to appear in court to appeal. I felt scammed but after calming myself down and paying the fine the officer apologized and told me in a few words he hated his job.

      • @[email protected]
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        13 hours ago

        They also can’t force a tourist to pay a fine. And it’s not a criminal matter, so they’ll never be able to deny you visa on these grounds.

        When the same happened to me I laughed into their faces, they wrote down my passport data and address and kept sending me snail mail with threats for years till I moved. I’m still waiting for the day they’ll force me to pay the 30€ or whatever that was.

      • @Dicska
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        14 hours ago

        Well, that’s rather reassuring.

    • Lemminary
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      48 hours ago

      Discounts on speeding tickets are a thing in my country. Maybe they were from somewhere else and assumed it was a thing there too? 😂

      • @Dicska
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        14 hours ago

        I wouldn’t be surprised, considering the accent of scammers calling me with phone plans and stuff.

    • @helpImTrappedOnline
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      15 hours ago

      cybersecurity education for school-aged children isn’t doing a great job of talking about online safety

      This sentence pretty much sums it up. School’s give them a computer, lock it down and put them in a bubble of safe websites and only tell them “there’s a virus boogyman who will get you if youre not careful”

      • @weeeeum
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        1312 hours ago

        As someone in gen z, I find that most get scammed trying to buy stupid shit. Discounted v bucks, expensive clothing for stupid cheap, stuff like that. Oh and temu, of course. They also get phished pretty easily as well.

        • SharkEatingBreakfast
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          1410 hours ago

          My niece is 14/15, and she gave all her bank account details to some guy on Tiktok who said he wanted to send her 5000$.

          There is an absolute failure in the teaching of online safety and critical thinking. The fault lies mostly on the parents, absolutely, but it needs to be taught in schools, like taxes (my kid is currently learning about how to file taxes in one of his classes).

          I’ve taught my kid about all types of things and the “why” behind it: don’t click links in email or messages, spotting ragebait content & not engaging with it, what is & isn’t appropriate to talk about with a stranger online, the intentions behind the actions and words of a potential predator, etc.

          Teach your kid to question things. Always give an answer to “why”, ALWAYS!!! Because if you don’t give access to the logic behind things, they will simply start to accept everything at face value without any thinking. Worse yet, if they don’t believe there’s logic behind your decisions and words, they will disregard your advice and simply do whatever they want.

          • capital
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            23 hours ago

            Always give an answer to “why”, ALWAYS!!!

            I love these questions from my daughter. It’s wild to me that some people ignore this stuff or tell kids to stop asking…

  • @Sam_Bass
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    19 hours ago

    hey 3 squares a day and never a dull moment. jail it is.

  • metaStatic
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    2020 hours ago

    I know a scam when I see one sir, good day. But first tell me more about this reverse mortgage.

    • @helpImTrappedOnline
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      215 hours ago

      Its really simple, after some brief paperwork, the loan company starts paying YOU for the privilege of servicing your mortgage.

      Call 1-800-74257655 now!