General Discussion
Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsDon't Troll the Scam Texts. You're Only Helping the Scammers.
Weve all been there. The text comes through at exactly the worst time: while youre unloading groceries, racing out the door or about to shut it all down for bed. Your package requires a redelivery fee, it reads. Or Unpaid toll notice. Sometimes its a stranger asking whether youre still on for dinner tomorrow night.
Most people delete the message without thinking much about it. Others report it as junk and move on. But theres a certain kind of person who sees a scam text (called smishing) not as a threat but as a fun opportunity. Instead of blocking the number, they answer with a fake identity. They drag the conversation out for minutes, making ridiculous assertions. Maybe they send absurd memes or intentionally confusing replies. The goal is to waste the scammers time, and have a laugh doing it.
(snip)
The problem, cybersecurity researchers say, is that your trolling may be giving the scammer exactly what they want.
It seems innocent, but you dont know whats happening in the background, says Mayra Rosario Fuentes, a senior threat researcher at the consumer digital-protection research firm TrendLife. Even if youre only giving fake information and never click a link, you are telling the scammer that this phone number is active, and its owner is willing to engage, Rosario Fuentes says. That likely puts your number up for sale on the dark web, providing fresh meat for other scammers.
Suzanne Sando, a lead analyst in fraud management at Javelin Strategy & Research, says people often underestimate how much information can be pieced together from what feels like harmless conversation. When someone engages, they may unintentionally confirm pieces of their identity, she says. Where they work. Whether they have a spouse. Maybe where their kids go to school.
Even small details can be revealing. The hour you engage with a fraudulent text may expose your time zone or schedule. A casual joke might hint at your age. A mention of travel plans can become useful later. Even replying STOP to a smishing text can increase the number of scam messages you receive, because it confirms someone is actively using the phone number.
More..
https://www.wsj.com/tech/cybersecurity/text-scams-trolling-1f98880e?st=q5TdMa&reflink=desktopwebshare_permalink
free
PATRICK
(12,435 posts)I just received the oddest spam that directly went to the SPAM folder but did NOT register in the count and I bet avoids deletion. The details are not stupid or weird, but perhaps tempting to this kind of response especially if I post on DU. From Kash Patel(I never got fake messages from real high ups except in DNC fundraising posts.) It relates to an actual Belgian financial guy named Pierre Bunsch from Belgium where he has 8,000,000 USD hidden in some investigation I supposedly have something to do with in an obviously mistaken mailing from Patel's personal address using a California origin e-mail. Does not show up yet in online "googling"
I don't use Google though) nor would I ever send anything to the FBI at this stage anyway, despite this using their so-called Director's name.
I never attacked alcoholics so I don't know the actual Kash Patel has any smishing vengeance planned, but, yes, I would never engage spam. Wasting the time of a hired lowlife is not a way I would waste my time. Giving them anything especially YOUR VOICE is a danger in itself(never answer a strange call with a "Yes?". Simply don't speak at all most times. A timed delay indicates a likely robocall.)
You should increase your screening security and wait for them to leave a message you can study. Leave the attacks to the scorching comedians.
OTOH this particular odd spam is a vast disappointment. Not even offering a gift card or a junior FBI badge..
usedtobedemgurl
(2,078 posts)Called scam bait. There are all minds of hints with using a different profile and everything. Yes, the point is to waste the scammers time. When it is a fake profile (there is a pin with tips on doing this), it is a lot harder to scam someone.
One thing I noticed was with the last scammer (this was a romance scam, which is really what scam boaters look for) was I kept telling him I would not move to Telegram. They try to get you to go there because some part of their scam (I think the gift cards) is easier over there. I said I would not go there, be wise scammers always try to get people to go there. I was asked for a photo, which "my photo" is already on my profile. I said no, and I explained how scammers will ask for private photos, so they can use the photos on another person. It is harder for a person to recognize a scam if the photo used is private. He kept saying how he was not a scammer. I kept insulting scammers. I said how stupid they were, because while they shared lists of folks who are someone to prey upon, they did not keep lists on who our "club"users are, so their time will not be wasted on something going nowhere.
He got extremely mad be wise of what I said and despite him asking me SIX times to go to Telegram, I kept saying no. He said I was a mad woman. He called me a " beech." I also have not heard from romance scammers for the month and a half since! I guess they do keep a list of folks who waste their time!
No matter what the article says, I will keep doing it. If they spend time on a dead end like me, it is less time to Conan unsuspecting person. BTW, we share text screenshots over at Reddit. It is a hoot.