Scams aren’t just sloppy emails anymore. This week, we’ve seen fraudsters impersonate major brands, exploit global crises, and fake relationships — all to get one thing: your trust.
From fake rental listings to hijacked food delivery accounts and emotional pleas on Instagram, it’s clear scammers are no longer relying on scare tactics alone. They’re using emotion, storytelling, and subtlety to fool even the cautious.
Here’s what to watch out for:
You get an email about updating your Grubhub+ payment method — except you never signed up. When you check the site using your email, there’s a profile with your address and someone else’s name. No order history, but a subscription is active.
This is likely a data-harvesting scam or a setup for future fraud. If you'd clicked the email link, it could have been worse.
Pro Tips:
A too-good-to-be-true villa in Montenegro appears on a trusted platform. When the booking is “rejected,” the owner emails directly, sharing a new link — supposedly to Vrbo.
The link leads to an impersonated scam website. After a wire transfer, the truth comes out: no villa, no refund.
Pro Tips:
Someone claiming to be a teenager in a conflict zone, like Palestine, reaches out asking for financial help. They share emotional videos, stories, and even an ID photo.
But when you ask questions, the answers are vague. The content they share already exists on their profile. It becomes clear: the identity may be fake, and the story is likely stolen.
Pro Tips:
A text says you’ve been fined for leaving your engine running — and gives you a link to pay immediately. Sounds urgent, but it’s a setup.
The link leads to a fake payment site that harvests your financial data.
Pro Tips:
You accept a friend request. Then come the messages — they’re from a widower stationed overseas, with a tragic backstory and a child in another country. Things move quickly, and soon there’s talk of needing help.
These scams are designed to build trust fast, then ask for money under emotional pressure.
Pro Tips:
These scams are no longer easy to spot. They don’t rely on typos or sketchy formatting — they rely on you caring enough to trust them.
So before you click, send, or reply:
Report what you see. Talk about it. Help others stay alert. The more we recognize these tactics, the harder it becomes for scammers to succeed.
Before you click, check with ScamAdviser.com—it’s a quick way to verify websites, phone numbers, crypto wallets, and even IBANs. On mobile? No worries—the ScamAdviser app has you covered 24/7, keeping you safer wherever you browse.