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3,332 results in Tech Support Scam
welivesecurity.com · 2025-12-08
Phone scams exploiting voice calls remain highly effective because scammers leverage human psychology and social engineering techniques, with callers having less time to verify legitimacy compared to written communication. In 2023, approximately 28% of unknown calls globally were fraud or spam, affecting 16% of consumers who lost an average of $2,257—a 527% increase from the previous year—while scammers obtain phone numbers through data breaches, social media scraping, and data brokers. Common phone scams include impersonation of authorities (vishing), remote access/tech support fraud, investment schemes, and prize draw scams, with consumers advised to heed "scam likely" warnings from their
finance.yahoo.com · 2025-12-08
A Federal Reserve research paper warns that even vigilant consumers face increasing risk from authorized push payment (APP) scams, as criminals use advanced technology to create increasingly realistic fraud schemes on platforms like Zelle. In 2023, Zelle customers disputed over $206 million in fraudulent transactions, with consumers bearing 80% of the costs and having little recourse once payments are executed. The Fed recommends that instant payment networks adopt more sophisticated fraud-fighting strategies, while scammers continue to evolve their tactics through methods such as fake accounts, mule schemes, and potentially AI-generated personas.
paymentsdive.com · 2025-12-08
As scammers increasingly use advanced technology to create realistic fraud schemes, authorized push payment scams—where criminals persuade consumers to voluntarily send money through instant payment networks like Zelle—pose a significant threat even to vigilant consumers. In 2023, Zelle customers disputed over $206 million in fraudulent transactions, with consumers bearing the costs of 80% of those disputes, and the paper notes that once payment is authorized, victims have little to no recourse since transactions are often irrevocable. The Federal Reserve recommends that financial institutions adopt artificial intelligence and machine learning to assess scam risk and alert customers before high-risk transactions are executed.
25newsnow.com · 2025-12-08
Black Friday online scams are becoming increasingly sophisticated, with 41% of all scams reported to the Better Business Bureau in 2023 originating from online purchases, affecting people of all ages through fake websites, deepfake influencer endorsements, and phishing tactics on social media. To protect themselves, consumers should verify website addresses, read reviews, avoid clicking suspicious links, never share private information via email or text, use credit cards instead of gift cards or cryptocurrency, enable multifactor authentication, and be cautious with peer-to-peer payment apps that lack consumer protections.
Tech Support Scam Phishing Online Shopping Scam Robocall / Phone Scam Scam Awareness Cryptocurrency Wire Transfer Gift Cards Cash Payment App Check/Cashier's Check Money Order / Western Union
timesnownews.com · 2025-12-08
A 70-year-old retired engineer in Delhi lost over Rs 10.3 crore in a "digital arrest" scam that spanned 19 days, beginning in late September 2024. Scammers posing as courier company staff and a Mumbai Police officer manipulated him by claiming a banned substance parcel contained his Aadhaar details, then convinced him to transfer money to "safe accounts" under threat of arrest. Police managed to freeze Rs 60 lakh of the stolen funds, with recovery efforts ongoing.
themtnear.com · 2025-12-08
A woman was scammed on Facebook when she sent a $200 deposit for a household item being sold by someone her sister had referred her to; the seller changed the terms after the deposit was made and refused to return the money. The article emphasizes that trusting a referral from someone you know does not guarantee the transaction is legitimate, and recommends conducting independent due diligence, asking detailed questions about transactions, and remaining vigilant about verifying identities online.
nationalseniors.com.au · 2025-12-08
National Seniors Australia's "Keep Scam SAFE" campaign, in partnership with CommBank, provides educational resources and workshops to help older Australians protect themselves from rising scams and fraud online. The campaign highlights common scam tactics including fake emails with urgent language, parcel delivery text messages (affecting 75% of scam targets), and voice cloning calls, while recommending protective strategies such as the "Stop, Check, Reject" approach, using Confirmation of Payee technology, regularly changing passwords, and accessing free digital literacy training through the Be Connected initiative.
fox13memphis.com · 2025-12-08
An educational meeting was held in Memphis where the Tennessee Division of Consumer Affairs taught seniors about common scams targeting older adults. Key advice included being skeptical of unsolicited calls, never sharing personal or financial information with unknown callers, and hanging up on suspicious contacts. The top scams affecting seniors include government imposter calls (especially during Medicare enrollment), fake tech support, sweepstakes scams, and grandchild-in-distress schemes, with scammers exploiting emotional manipulation and targeting older adults for their typically greater assets.
gmtoday.com · 2025-12-08
Investment scams remain the highest risk for adults over 55, followed by online purchase scams and romance scams, according to the Better Business Bureau Scam Tracker Risk Report. The article provides consumer protection guidance including: avoiding unsolicited calls (especially from spoofed numbers), recognizing red flags like pressure to act quickly or requests for unusual payment methods, hiring only licensed contractors after thorough vetting, being alert to emergency scams targeting grandchildren, and avoiding Medicare fraud schemes involving "free" medical equipment.
thereflector.com · 2025-12-08
Seniors are increasingly targeted by phone scams, particularly those using artificial intelligence to mimic loved ones and request money or personal information. In 2023, the FBI reported over 101,000 elder fraud victims aged 60+ lost an average of $33,915 each, with Battle Ground police documenting an 85.3% surge in fraud cases between October 2023 and October 2024. Experts advise seniors to hang up on any unsolicited caller requesting money or sensitive data, verify requests independently through official phone numbers, and avoid untraceable payment methods like gift cards or cryptocurrency.
zdnet.com · 2025-12-08
"Scam yourself" attacks, where fraudsters use social engineering to trick people into downloading malware themselves, have increased 614% between the second and third quarters of this year, affecting millions globally. Common tactics include fake software updates, misleading tutorials, fake CAPTCHAs (with over 2 million targeted last quarter), and "click fix" schemes that prompt users to run malicious commands. To protect themselves, users should verify update sources directly through settings menus, avoid following online instructions to run command prompt text, check website URLs carefully, and take time to verify suspicious requests before acting.
hindustantimes.com · 2025-12-08
A 31-year-old woman in Bengaluru lost ₹1.1 lakh after being falsely accused of uploading child pornography in a "digital arrest" scam. Scammers impersonated a mobile service provider and then a Mumbai cybercrime officer, threatening her with arrest and demanding money for a fake "virtual investigation." Police registered a case under the Information Technology Act and warned the public about similar scams, with authorities noting that legitimate investigative agencies never conduct inquiries via phone or video calls.
southeastiowaunion.com · 2025-12-08
**Article:** "Senior Citizens Targeted by Technology Scams: How to Identify and Protect Against Fraud" by Beth Swift, Washington Evening Journal Senior citizens are increasingly targeted by technology scams including impersonation fraud, prize/sweepstakes schemes, tech support scams, charity fraud, and IRS threats, with older adults disproportionately victimized because they typically have savings and good credit. The article identifies key warning signs—unsolicited contact, artificial urgency, requests for money or personal information, unrealistic offers, and poor communication quality—and advises seniors to verify caller identity independently, never share sensitive information, consult trusted contacts before responding to requests
tech.co · 2025-12-08
Venmo, while convenient for peer-to-peer money transfers, poses significant fraud risks through scams such as fake payment links (phishing), online purchase fraud where sellers never deliver items, and duplicate profile scams where fraudsters create accounts mimicking legitimate users. Users can protect themselves by enabling two-factor authentication, verifying recipient information before sending money, using the app's native payment features for purchases, and never clicking suspicious links or sharing login credentials.
catcountry1073.com · 2025-12-08
The FBI warned New Jersey and Pennsylvania residents about two holiday scams: romance scams, where criminals use fake online identities to build trust and manipulate victims into sending money or gifts; and ransomware attacks, which lock computer files and demand payment for their return, often triggered by clicking suspicious emails or links about package deliveries. Both scams exploit holiday season vulnerabilities, and the FBI advises victims to verify identities, never send money to strangers online, and avoid clicking on unsolicited messages about packages or purchases.
wealthmanagement.com · 2025-12-08
Elderly individuals are increasingly targeted by sophisticated internet scams, with the FBI's 2023 Elder Fraud Report documenting over 880,000 complaints from those over 60 totaling $3.4 billion in losses—an 11% increase from 2022. Notable cases include a 76-year-old retired lawyer (Barry Heitin) who lost approximately $740,000 after being manipulated into thinking he was assisting a government investigation, and a 79-year-old man (Alfred Mancinelli) who lost nearly $1 million in a romance scam. Tech support fraud generates the most complaints, followed by romance, cryptocurrency, and investment sc
westfaironline.com · 2025-12-08
A 24-year-old Bengali student in New York on a student visa, Mazharul Islam, was arrested and charged with operating a Geek Squad auto-renewal scam that defrauded elderly victims of significant sums. Islam posed as a Best Buy employee, sending phishing emails to trick victims into believing they needed to renew service contracts, then directed them to fake refund links and convinced them they had overpaid, coercing them to withdraw cash; he personally served as the courier in at least two cases, collecting $35,000 from a 73-year-old Warwick man and $20,000 from an Ohio victim before being caught by police. Islam pleade
forbes.com · 2025-12-08
Foreign scammers are using AI-generated images and fabricated military identities to conduct romance scams targeting vulnerable U.S. widows, with perpetrators primarily operating from Ghana and Nigeria. These "Artificial Patriot" scammers build emotional connections through social media and dating platforms, then request money for fabricated emergencies (medical bills, travel expenses), with victims losing substantial sums including their life savings through untraceable wire transfers and gift cards. The scam exploits widows' emotional vulnerability and difficulty distinguishing AI-generated fake military profiles from authentic ones, even using stolen identities of real military officers like General Matthew W. McFarlane.
voz.us · 2025-12-08
According to an AARP survey, 82% of consumers have been victims of shopping fraud, with online scams being a primary vector. Common scams include fraudulent websites and social media (35% of victims), false shipment notifications (which increased from 29% of victims in 2022 to 56% in 2024), and doorstep package theft affecting over 30% of respondents. The survey also found that consumers show low awareness of fraud risks in charitable donations and travel giveaways, and many do not utilize credit cards—which offer stronger fraud protections—for holiday shopping.
podcastingtoday.co.uk · 2025-12-08
**Summary:** Scam Detectors is a new educational podcast hosted by BBC technology journalist Jane Wakefield that aims to raise awareness about rising scams and provide consumer protection tips. The inaugural episode focuses on romance scams, featuring a case study of an individual who lost nearly $60,000 through a dating app scammer, alongside research showing that 30% of UK adults and 30% of US consumers have been fraud victims, with romance scams causing average losses of $2,000 and accounting for the largest financial impact among fraud types.
wired.com · 2025-12-08
Meta disclosed its multiyear effort to combat pig butchering scams, having removed over 2 million accounts linked to scam compounds in Southeast Asia and the UAE in 2024 alone. These scams, which have defrauded victims of approximately $75 billion globally since 2020, involve organized crime syndicates operating forced-labor compounds where over 200,000 trafficked people are coerced into impersonating romantic interests or investment advisors to extract money from victims worldwide. Meta stated it is collaborating with law enforcement and other tech companies to disrupt these criminal operations, though researchers note the company has been slow to publicly acknowledge the problem and engage with the
yahoo.com · 2025-12-08
Financial scams affect millions of Americans annually, with one in five adults losing money to online fraud, including romance scams, investment schemes, and identity theft. Beyond financial losses, scam victims often experience significant emotional trauma including feelings of betrayal, powerlessness, and reduced self-esteem, with effects extending to mental health, physical health, and personal relationships. Mental health organizations and fraud protection technologies are increasingly working to support victims and detect fraudulent activity, though scams continue to evolve with tools like AI-generated videos making deception more convincing.
cnet.com · 2025-12-08
Meta removed over 2 million accounts in 2023 linked to criminal gangs operating "pig butchering" scams from Southeast Asia and the UAE, which lure victims into fake investments through social engineering and cryptocurrency fraud. These scam operations, which cost victims globally an estimated $64 billion in 2023, often rely on coerced labor from hundreds of thousands of workers forced into scamming under threat of harm. Meta and partner organizations recommend victims use two-factor authentication, remain skeptical of unsolicited investment offers and impersonators, and verify the identities of unknown contacts reaching out through social media and messaging apps.
therecord.media · 2025-12-08
Meta removed over 2 million accounts in 2024 connected to pig butchering scams—fraud schemes originating from Southeast Asia and the UAE where criminals pose as romantic interests or investment advisors on messaging and dating platforms to lure victims into depositing money into fake cryptocurrency platforms. The scams are operated by transnational criminal groups running compounds in Myanmar, Cambodia, Laos, the Philippines, and the UAE using trafficked workers, with victims often losing their life savings before the fraudsters disappear. Meta collaborated with law enforcement, NGOs, and other tech companies through the "Tech Against Scams" partnership to combat these crimes, though the UN warns that scammers are increasingly adopting advanced tools like
westfaironline.com · 2025-12-08
A 24-year-old Bengali national living in New York on a student visa, Mazharul Islam, was arrested and charged with conspiracy and wire fraud for operating a Geek Squad auto-renewal scam targeting elderly victims in Orange County and Ohio. In the first case, Islam posed as a courier and collected $35,000 in cash from a 73-year-old Warwick man who was tricked into believing he had accidentally authorized a $41,999 charge; police arrested Islam during a subsequent sting operation involving a decoy $22,000 payment. Islam admitted to working as a courier for an operation based in India, earning $2,000 per
arstechnica.com · 2025-12-08
Federal prosecutors charged five men operating the cybercriminal group Scattered Spider for running a sophisticated phishing scheme that compromised hundreds of companies nationwide and stole millions in cryptocurrency and sensitive data. The group was responsible for a major breach of MGM Resorts that cost the company $100 million in damages and disruptions, as well as breaching authentication provider Twilio to gain access to additional targets. Authorities emphasized that the phishing attacks were highly methodical and difficult to detect, resulting in the theft of tens of millions of dollars in intellectual property and personal information from hundreds of thousands of individuals.
Tech Support Scam Phishing Financial Crime Cryptocurrency Bank Transfer
bankrate.com · 2025-12-08
Holiday shoppers face multiple online scams including puppy scams (fake breeders requesting upfront deposits), toy scams (counterfeit or non-existent products at discounted prices), and marketplace frauds on platforms like Facebook Marketplace where scammers take payment and disappear. Protection strategies include being skeptical of prices that seem too good to be true, avoiding clicking links from ads or search results, purchasing directly from trusted retailers, and refusing to pay upfront to unverified sellers who won't communicate via phone or video.
about.fb.com · 2025-12-08
Criminals operating forced-labor scam compounds primarily in Southeast Asia (Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar, and the UAE) systematically target people worldwide through text messaging, dating apps, and social media to perpetrate "pig butchering" and investment fraud schemes. These criminal organizations, estimated to control up to 300,000 forced workers, steal approximately $64 billion annually by building false trust with victims and manipulating them into depositing money into fake cryptocurrency and investment platforms. The article outlines how scam operators use deceptive personas, scripted social engineering tactics, and phased withdrawal schemes to exploit victims globally before disappearing with their funds.
nbcnews.com · 2025-12-08
Pig butchering scams, which cost Americans billions of dollars annually, involve scammers building fake romantic or friendly relationships with victims over months before directing them to fraudulent cryptocurrency investments. Meta announced major countermeasures including taking down 2 million accounts in 2024, dedicating staff to identify scammer locations, sharing intelligence with law enforcement, and automatically flagging suspicious messages on Facebook Messenger, Instagram DMs, and WhatsApp. The FBI reported nearly $4 billion in crypto investment scam losses in September 2024, though actual losses are likely higher due to underreporting, and critics argue tech companies' responses remain insufficient given the scale of the problem.
spokanejournal.com · 2025-12-08
Financial fraud targeting older adults has significantly increased in sophistication, with U.S. financial institutions reporting approximately $27 billion in suspicious elder financial exploitation activity from June 2022 to June 2023, and older adults losing over $1.9 billion to fraud in 2023 alone (though the FTC estimates the actual figure may reach $61.5 billion). Check fraud has become particularly prevalent, increasing 385% nationwide since the COVID-19 pandemic, with criminals stealing checks from mailboxes and using chemical solvents to alter amounts while preserving signatures. Financial experts recommend protective measures including using permanent gel markers on checks, avoiding blank spaces, monitoring statements regularly, and educating family
Romance Scam Tech Support Scam Phishing Grandparent Scam Online Shopping Scam Wire Transfer Bank Transfer Check/Cashier's Check
aol.com · 2025-12-08
Meta announced the removal of over 2 million accounts related to "pig butchering" scams in 2024, elaborate fraud schemes where scammers build fake romantic or friendly relationships with victims over months before directing them to fraudulent cryptocurrency investments. The FBI reported victims lost nearly $4 billion to crypto investment scams in 2023, with actual losses likely much higher due to underreporting, and Meta is implementing new defenses including automatic flagging of suspicious messages from strangers on Facebook Messenger, Instagram DMs, and WhatsApp.
siliconangle.com · 2025-12-08
Meta removed approximately 2 million accounts linked to "pig-butchering" scams, a sophisticated fraud scheme where scammers build trust with victims online before directing them to invest in cryptocurrency or fraudulent job opportunities. The accounts originated primarily from Myanmar, Laos, Cambodia, the United Arab Emirates, and the Philippines, and studies indicate these scams have stolen over $75 billion globally since 2020, with Americans losing a record $4 billion in crypto scams alone as of September.
listverse.com · 2025-12-08
This article is not relevant to the Elderus elder fraud research database. The content is a general listicle about various scams (cryptocurrency investment scams, online marketplace scams, phone scams, etc.) rather than a focused article about elder fraud, elder abuse, or scams specifically targeting older adults. To be useful for Elderus, the article would need to specifically address scams affecting seniors, elder financial exploitation, or elder abuse cases. Please provide an article or transcript focused on elder-specific fraud or abuse for summarization.
Romance Scam Crypto Investment Scam Investment Fraud Tech Support Scam Phishing Cryptocurrency Gift Cards Check/Cashier's Check
mashable.com · 2025-12-08
Blanca, a 29-year-old investor, lost $60,000 to Ascend CapVentures Inc. (operating as Ascend Ecom), a company that promised to manage an Amazon store on her behalf and generate five-figure monthly income. The Federal Trade Commission filed a lawsuit alleging the company defrauded customers out of at least $25 million by misrepresenting earnings potential and using customer investments to enrich themselves rather than manage stores. The FTC also took action against similar companies, Ecommerce Empire Builders and FBA Machine, highlighting widespread fraud in the ecommerce automation opportunity sector.
jdsupra.com · 2025-12-08
Deepfake technology is being weaponized for widespread fraud, including financial scams where criminals impersonate executives or loved ones to steal money (one case involved a $25.6 million loss), sextortion schemes, and romance scams enhanced with fake video. The technology poses escalating threats to individuals, corporations, and institutions as criminals exploit AI-generated deepfakes faster than legal protections can be established, with victims including everyday people, minors, and public figures targeted for financial exploitation and non-consensual explicit content.
greekreporter.com · 2025-12-08
Virgin Media O2 launched Daisy, an AI-powered virtual grandmother, to combat rising phone and online scams targeting older adults by engaging fraudsters in lengthy, complex conversations that waste their time and prevent them from victimizing real customers. The initiative addresses a critical problem: Americans over 60 lost $3.4 billion to scams in 2023 (an 11% increase from 2022), with the average victim losing $33,915, while 22% of Britons report facing fraud attempts weekly. Daisy uses advanced natural language processing and realistic voice synthesis to convincingly pose as a vulnerable elderly person, gathering intelligence on scam tactics while raising public awareness about digital
mysuncoast.com · 2025-12-08
A 56-year-old man in Bradenton, Florida was arrested for impersonating Elon Musk on Facebook and defrauding a 74-year-old Texas woman of over $600,000 after convincing her to invest in fake business opportunities with promised returns of $55 million. Elder fraud is rising across Florida's Suncoast region through various scams including romance and phishing schemes, with authorities recommending residents pause to verify requests, question urgency, and recognize too-good-to-be-true offers.
indianexpress.com · 2025-12-08
Google identified five common online scams affecting its billions of users: deepfake content impersonating public figures to promote investment fraud, cryptocurrency investment schemes promising unrealistic returns, fake banking apps and websites designed to steal personal information, cloaking attacks that show different content to users than to Google's security systems, and fraudulent event ticketing pages that mirror legitimate sites to sell fake merchandise and tickets. The company recommends users verify app sources, examine URLs and website details carefully, watch for unnatural expressions in videos, avoid investment offers that seem too good to be true, and enable browser protections to identify malicious sites.
techradar.com · 2025-12-08
AI voice-clone scams are increasing as scammers use generative AI models to imitate family members, authorities, and celebrities in phone fraud schemes, requiring only small audio samples sourced from social media to create convincing synthetic voices. According to security experts, 28% of UK adults have been targeted by these scams, with only 30% confident they could recognize one; recommended safeguards include establishing secret phrases with loved ones, verifying callers through callback, and listening for artificial speech patterns.
theguardian.com · 2025-12-08
Police warn that criminals are rapidly exploiting artificial intelligence to commit fraud, child sexual abuse, and other crimes at scale. High-profile cases include deepfake video conference scams that defrauded a finance worker of £20.5 million, generative AI systems used to create thousands of child abuse images, and sextortion schemes using manipulated photos. Law enforcement identifies child abuse imagery and fraud as the primary criminal uses of AI currently, while also warning of emerging threats including terrorist radicalization through AI chatbots.
vancouver.citynews.ca · 2025-12-08
Vancouver police warned the public about ticket scams targeting Taylor Swift Eras Tour attendees, advising buyers to use only verified ticketing platforms and trusted resellers. A Toronto woman lost $600 after being defrauded by an online scammer posing as a teenage girl on TikTok and Instagram who sold her fake concert tickets via PayPal, leaving her and her friend with only one ticket instead of two.
sheppnews.com.au · 2025-12-08
A woman lost money to a sophisticated two-stage scam that began with a fraudulent call claiming to be from NBN offering an internet refund, which gained remote access to her computer via AnyDesk software. The scammers then impersonated her bank's fraud department, using the continued remote access to move funds between her accounts and authorize an unauthorized transfer, which she discovered only after visiting her bank branch the next day. The article highlights red flags including unsolicited direct contact from NBN, requests for remote computer access, and fraudulent claims of being a bank representative needing device access—legitimate banks never require remote access to verify accounts or detect fraud.
bbc.com · 2025-12-08
Des Healey, a kitchen fitter from Brighton, lost £75,000 to a Facebook investment scam that used AI-generated deepfake videos falsely showing money-saving expert Martin Lewis and Elon Musk endorsing a bitcoin scheme. After initially investing £1,000 through a fraudster posing as financial adviser "Carl," Des was manipulated into taking out four loans totalling £70,000 to keep investing, only discovering the scam when his son heard suspicious background noise during a call with the scammer. Martin Lewis highlighted that scammers use psychological manipulation and urgency tactics, and emphasized that falling victim to scams does not indicate a lack of
nationalpost.com · 2025-12-08
A 56-year-old Florida man, Jeffrey Arthur Moynihan Jr., was arrested and charged with grand theft for impersonating Elon Musk on Facebook to scam a 74-year-old Texas woman out of $250,000 (with her husband reporting the actual total may reach $600,000) by convincing her to invest in fake business opportunities. Moynihan established rapport with the victim over several months in 2023 by referencing real Musk social media posts, eventually persuading her that she had legitimately invested with the tech billionaire; police also discovered evidence he used false identities of actors Johnny Depp and Lionel Richie, an
brobible.com · 2025-12-08
A 56-year-old Florida man was arrested for impersonating Elon Musk on Facebook and defrauding a 74-year-old Texas woman of approximately $600,000 by posing as the billionaire and promising massive returns on fake investments. Jeffrey Arthur Moynihan Jr. befriended the victim over several months, using real posts from Musk's social media accounts to appear authentic, and directed the money to bank accounts he controlled. The case highlights a broader epidemic of celebrity impersonation scams targeting elderly victims across the United States.
forbes.com · 2025-12-08
Cybercriminals are using AI-generated phishing emails claiming that recipients' Apple IDs have been suspended, creating false urgency especially during Black Friday and Cyber Monday shopping season to trick users into clicking malicious links and surrendering account credentials. The scams target Apple's 2 billion+ users by impersonating legitimate Apple communications, sometimes including sophisticated 2FA-bypass methodologies, and exploiting the affluent Apple user demographic. Apple advises users to verify sender email addresses, avoid clicking suspicious links, recognize that Apple never requests passwords or authentication codes via email, and contact Apple directly through its official website if they suspect account issues.
ucf.edu · 2025-12-08
Scammers stole over $1.6 billion from victims in the first five months of 2024—a 20% increase from 2023—though actual numbers are higher due to underreporting. Researcher Nichole Lighthall at UCF's Adult Development and Decision Lab found that while most older adults recognize scams as a problem, they feel disempowered to prevent them, and scams range from minor losses of $50 to financially catastrophic amounts. Lighthall's research aims to empower seniors with knowledge and solutions, noting that modern scammers use increasingly relentless tactics like impersonation texts, robo-calls, and social engineering because
federalwaymirror.com · 2025-12-08
Federal Way Police Department community engagement coordinator Tiffany Clemmings presented crime prevention education to local seniors at a November 13 meeting, covering situational awareness, vehicle theft prevention, home safety, and common scams. The presentation emphasized that while criminals need desire, ability, and opportunity to commit crimes, individuals can reduce criminal opportunities through crime prevention awareness and situational awareness. Key information included that tech support scams, government imposter scams, grandparent scams, and romance scams are the top threats to seniors, and that Federal Way experienced a 50% decline in auto thefts in 2024 compared to 2023.
advocacy.consumerreports.org · 2025-12-08
Consumer Reports investigation found that wire transfer scams targeting bank customers are increasingly common, with victims rarely reimbursed—major banks like JP Morgan Chase, Wells Fargo, and Bank of America reimbursed customers at rates of only 2-24 percent in 2023. The scams exploit banks' security gaps using readily available "phishing-as-a-service" kits sold on Telegram and the Dark Web for as little as $150 monthly, with phishing complaints to the FBI more than doubling since 2019 to nearly 300,000 reports annually. Consumer Reports is calling on the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau to investigate these scams and support reforms including stronger account authentication, security
consumerreports.org · 2025-12-08
Bank imposter fraud targeting customers is becoming increasingly sophisticated, with scammers using phishing schemes, hacked personal data, and affordable "phishing-as-a-service" cybercrime kits (costing as little as $150/month) to steal billions from Americans' bank accounts. Major banks like Wells Fargo have faced multiple class-action lawsuits, with documented losses exceeding $700,000 in individual cases, yet banks frequently deny reimbursement claims citing the Electronic Fund Transfer Act, which does not require them to reimburse customers who are tricked into authorizing fraudulent transfers. Key advice includes being skeptical of unsolicited calls claiming to be from banks,