Author | Thread: On stereotyping, scammers and identity theft |
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Admin |
On stereotyping, scammers and identity theftPosted : 14 Nov, 2018 01:27 PMI am not a scammer. I just found out from forums that women from my country are stereotyped to being such. That is very unfortunate for people from my country who are truly looking for that special someone and for people from the rest of the planet who limit their choices to their own country or race when they can't even find their partners in person. |
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On stereotyping, scammers and identity theftPosted : 14 Nov, 2018 10:28 PMPhishers and scammers have a bunch of vectors they can use to attack. They can do thinks like trick you into giving them information directly, lead you to a fake website that appears to be something else (e.g. a fake Amazon or Facebook that collects your username and password when you input them), give you poisoned links that lead to malware distribution, deceive you into letting them access your system directly through stuff like screenshare, and so on. The common link is you typically compromise yourself through your own actions, whether you are aware of them or not. |
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On stereotyping, scammers and identity theftPosted : 15 Nov, 2018 04:00 AMThanks for the info, Geo. That was informative. Would you recommend setting up a new email address and having another phone number for the sole purpose of communicating with members on sites like this for safety? |
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On stereotyping, scammers and identity theftPosted : 15 Nov, 2018 11:21 AMA burner email address might be useful if you're really worried. I don't see why you'd need an extra phone exclusively for near-strangers, though. There are plenty of VOIP services you can use to talk with someone over the Internet--Skype, etc. |