We're here to help you stay safe from scams.
Check anything suspicious for scams — and learn how to protect yourself.
Check anything suspicious for scams — and learn how to protect yourself.
AI can clone your voice from just 3 seconds of audio — scammers use these clones to impersonate family members and trick victims into wiring money 1 in 4 Americans encountered an AI voice scam in 2024 — victims lost an average of $540, with many reporting losses exceeding $6,000 Your personal info is likely already exposed — 2 out of 3 major data breaches contain Social Security numbers, making identity theft easier than ever
In-depth investigations into trending scams
How scammers impersonate your bank's fraud department to steal your money.
The emotional manipulation tactics behind online dating fraud.
AI voice cloning and the "grandparent scam" targeting loved ones.
"Pig butchering" crypto scams that drain life savings through fake apps.
Learn to verify before you trust
Scammers disguise emails to look like trusted brands. Tap the sender's name to reveal the real address.
Caller ID can be spoofed to show any number. Always hang up and call the official number yourself.
Smishing texts create urgency to get you to click. Go directly to the company's official website instead.
Learn to verify before you trust
Scammers disguise emails to look like trusted brands. Tap the sender's name to reveal the real address.
Caller ID can be spoofed to show any number. Always hang up and call the official number yourself.
Smishing texts create urgency to get you to click. Go directly to the company's official website instead.
Learn to recognize scams before they happen
Check the URL carefully. Fake sites use misspellings like "amaz0n" or "waImart" (with a capital i).
Too good to be true = scam. Extreme discounts on luxury items are always fake.
Use credit cards only. Gift cards, wire transfers, and crypto have no buyer protection.
No investment is "guaranteed." Anyone promising risk-free returns is lying.
Understand before you invest. If you can't explain it, don't put money in it.
Recruiting = pyramid scheme. Legit investments don't require you to bring in others.
Meet in person, pay in person. Don't send money before seeing the item.
Never share verification codes. That's how they steal your accounts.
Overpayment = scam. If they "accidentally" pay too much and ask for a refund, run.
Book directly with airlines/hotels. Third-party sites can be fake or have hidden fees.
"Free" trips have catches. Timeshare presentations, hidden fees, or they simply don't exist.
Verify vacation rentals. Reverse image search photos and check reviews on multiple sites.
Use official ticket sites only. Ticketmaster, AXS, or the venue's own website.
Screenshots can be sold multiple times. Demand a verified transfer through the official app.
Below face value = fake. Nobody sells real tickets at a loss.
Research before donating. Check Charity Navigator or GuideStar for legitimacy.
Real charities don't want gift cards. Wire transfers and crypto are red flags too.
Pressure tactics = scam. Real charities give you time to verify them.
Not sure where to start? Answer 5 simple questions about your digital habits and we'll build you a custom Safety Plan.
Select all that apply. We'll tailor your plan accordingly.
Forget the image of a lone scammer in a basement. In 2026, fraud is run like a Fortune 500 company. The global scam industry generates $50-70 billion annually, with Southeast Asian operations alone producing $43.8 billion. These are industrial operations with office buildings, shifts, scripts, and performance metrics.
Inside these compounds, hundreds of workers sit at computers following carefully crafted scripts. They have daily quotas, team leaders, and performance bonuses—just like any sales floor. Recruiters find victims, script designers craft manipulation, and "closers" extract the money. It's fraud, industrialized.
Here's what makes it complicated: many people running these scams didn't choose to. An estimated 220,000 people are held as forced laborers in scam centers across Cambodia and Myanmar alone. Lured by fake job postings, they arrive to find their passports seized and armed guards at the gates.
In 2026, scammers can clone your voice with just a few seconds of audio scraped from social media. Deepfake video calls can be generated in real-time. When your daughter calls crying about an accident, how do you know it's really her?
The most devastating scams aren't quick hits. Scammers spend weeks or months building a relationship before ever mentioning money. They learn your interests, fears, and dreams. By the time they ask you to "invest," you're emotionally invested. Victims have lost their entire retirement savings.
Scammers use documented psychological techniques: "love bombing" to create attachment, manufactured urgency to bypass judgment, strategic silence to keep you anxious. They mirror your communication style. This isn't improvisation—it's a playbook refined over millions of interactions.
Before a scammer contacts you, they've done their homework. Your social media reveals your interests, job, family members, and recent travels. Data breaches have exposed billions of records. The "random" message wasn't random at all.
Once they have your money, it moves fast. Cryptocurrency makes transfers instant and hard to trace. Networks of "money mules" shuffle funds through dozens of accounts. By the time you realize you've been scammed, your money has crossed multiple borders and blockchains.
When authorities shut down one compound, operations move to another country within weeks. When platforms block one technique, scammers test ten new ones. A UN report found criminal organizations are "rapidly outpacing" government efforts. The industry adapts faster than enforcement can follow.
In 2026, trust must be earned, not assumed. Verify unexpected requests through a second channel. Create family code words for emergencies. Question urgency—real emergencies can wait for verification. Scams have changed. Your defenses need to change too.
"You've been selected for a part-time position paying $500/week." The check clears — then bounces 3 weeks later. You owe the bank everything.
You receive an unexpected email or text: "Congratulations! You've been selected for a remote position." The job sounds perfect — flexible hours, good pay, work from home. But there's a catch you won't see coming.
The "employer" sends you a check for equipment or supplies — often $2,000 to $5,000. They ask you to deposit it, keep your "first week's pay," and wire the rest to a vendor. The check looks real. Your bank even makes the funds available.
Three weeks later, the check bounces. It was fake all along. But you've already wired the money — and that's gone forever. Now you owe your bank the full amount, plus overdraft fees.
If you've deposited a suspicious check, contact your bank immediately. Report the scam to the FTC at reportfraud.ftc.gov and your state attorney general's office.
Help others stay safe. Share this article with friends and family who are job hunting.
Choose the method that works best for you
Stay vigilant and trust your instincts. If something feels off, it probably is.
Check emails, texts, conversations, offers, and more
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Send it to acmecorp@scamzero.com from any email app. Include the original message—just hit forward.
Our AI examines sender details, links, language patterns, and attachments to detect scam signals.
Within seconds, you'll receive a reply with a link to your detailed analysis report.
acmecorp@scamzero.com
Step-by-step help to protect yourself and recover from scams
Use the number on the back of your physical card (not from Google). Ask for the Fraud Department and tell them it's a fraudulent charge.
Tell them you want to dispute the charge and request a chargeback. Credit cards have strong protections under the Fair Credit Billing Act (FCBA).
Send a written dispute letter within 60 days of the charge. Use the billing inquiry address (not the payment address).
Keep copies of all emails, receipts, and screenshots related to the scam. You may need these for your dispute.
Watch for additional unauthorized charges. Consider requesting a new card number if your card details were compromised.
Report the fraud to build an official record that helps with your dispute.
Wire transfers may be reversible within minutes to hours. ACH payments have a 24-hour reversal window. Call now and ask them to halt or reverse the transfer.
If you used a money transfer service, contact them directly to report fraud.
For Zelle, contact through your bank app's Help section.
After calling, follow up with a written fraud claim. Document everything in writing for your records.
Collect all details about the transfer: amounts, dates, recipient info, confirmation numbers. You'll need these for reports.
Report to authorities. The FBI's IC3 is especially important for wire transfer fraud.
Wire transfers are difficult to reverse once completed, but reporting still helps law enforcement track scammers and may lead to recovery.
Call the company that issued the card immediately. If the funds haven't been spent yet, they may be able to freeze the remaining balance.
For Google Play, report through your Google account settings.
Ask the company if the gift card balance has been used. If it hasn't, they may be able to void the card and issue a refund.
Keep the physical gift card, receipt, and any screenshots of the card numbers you shared. You'll need these for claims.
Report the scam to authorities. A police report may be required for some gift card company claims.
Consider filing a local police report for documentation.
Gift cards work like cash, so recovery is difficult. However, some companies will refund if funds haven't been spent.
Do NOT send any more money trying to "recover" your losses. This is a common follow-up scam tactic.
Collect all information about the transactions: wallet addresses, amounts, dates, and transaction IDs/hashes. These are crucial for reporting.
If you used an exchange like Coinbase, Binance, or Kraken, report the fraud to their support team. They may be able to help track or flag the recipient.
Report to law enforcement. The FBI IC3 is critical for crypto scams. For investment fraud, also report to the SEC.
Cryptocurrency transactions are usually not recoverable. However, reporting still matters - law enforcement can trace funds and has recovered some through programs like Operation Level Up.
Place a free Security Freeze on your credit reports. This stops anyone from opening new loans in your name.
These prevent scammers from opening fake bank accounts and phone/utility accounts in your name.
Pull your free reports to see if any accounts were already opened that you don't recognize.
Check AnnualCreditReport.com →If your Social Security Number was taken, report it to the Social Security Administration to prevent benefit fraud.
Request an Identity Protection PIN from the IRS to stop scammers from filing a fake tax return in your name.
If someone is blackmailing you, do not pay. Paying tells them you're a "payer" and they will come back for more.
Block the scammer on every platform immediately. Most extortionists move on when they can't get money from you.
If they threaten to leak photos, use these tools to "fingerprint" your images so platforms block them automatically.
Screenshot every threat and message. Include the date/time and the scammer's username or phone number.
If you feel overwhelmed, scared, or ashamed—that's normal. Scammers want you isolated. Reaching out breaks their power.
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