Imagine you’re selling an old sofa on Facebook Marketplace or browsing Tinder. A buyer or a match reach out, and they seem perfect. But within three messages, they say: "I’m not on here much, can we move this to WhatsApp or Telegram?"
Suddenly, they know your area code, your occupation, or the exact item you’re selling. It feels like a normal conversation, but in the U.S. digital economy, this "hop" is the primary tactic used to bypass consumer protections. Here is how to spot the "Platform Hop" before it costs you.
Platform hopping occurs when a bad actor lures you away from a secure site (like eBay, Airbnb, or LinkedIn) to an unmonitored channel like WhatsApp, Telegram, or SMS text. Once you leave the original app, the "paper trail" vanishes, and the platform’s built-in fraud protections no longer apply.
The FBI’s Internet Crime Complaint Center (IC3) has noted a massive rise in "Pig Butchering" and investment scams that almost always begin with a platform hop—moving from social media to encrypted chat apps to build "romance" or "trust."
Scenario
The Hook
The "Hop"
Marketplace
Selling a car or furniture on FB Marketplace or Craigslist.
"My phone is dying, text me at [Number]." They then send a fake Zelle or Venmo "Business Account" upgrade email.
Job Search
A high-paying remote "Data Entry" job on LinkedIn or Indeed.
"Our hiring manager only interviews via Telegram." They eventually ask for a "startup equipment fee."
Wrong Number
An "accidental" text: "Hey Sarah, are we still meeting for golf?"
When you reply "Wrong number," they act friendly and ask to move to WhatsApp to "be friends," leading to fake crypto sites.
Rental/Housing
A beautiful apartment listed on Zillow or Apartments.com.
"I'm out of town; message me on WhatsApp for the video tour." They demand a deposit via Cash App before you see the place.
Source: Trend Micro
The best way to stay safe in 2026 is to have a digital bodyguard in your pocket. ScamAdviser is an essential tool used by millions to identify fraud before it happens.
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