Watch Out For These Phone Scams

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Lucky winner

Congrats! You just won a free vacation-or a million dollars! If it sounds too good to be true, it probably is. "In a legitimate lottery or sweepstakes, you have to enter the contest somehow," says Eva Velasquez, CEO of the Identity Theft Resource Center in California, USA. "If you ever 'win' a contest that you didn't enter-especially one with a prize worth millions-you're probably being scammed."

Donation collections

When charities, political parties and lobbyists request donations over the phone, show some healthy scepticism. "Some will be legitimate. Many will not," says Adam Levin, founder of the US-based global identity--protection and data-risk-services firm CyberScout and author of Swiped. "Risk being rude and say, 'Send me more information.'" If it's a cause you care about, do a little online digging to find out whether the caller is the real deal.

Tech support

If someone claiming to be from tech companies such as Microsoft or Apple calls to ask whether you've had computer problems, just say no and hang up. "No one is 'watching' your computer for signs of a virus," says Velasquez. Those scammers won't fix the problem-they'll make it worse by installing malware, says cybersecurity expert John Sileo.

"Can you hear me?"

If you pick up the phone and the caller starts by asking, "Can you hear me?" take a pause. A scammer might be recording your voice to use later to place a phone order in your name-with your recorded "yes" affirming that you have agreed to the bogus purchase. Even if it looks as if the call is from someone you know, just to be safe, rephrase your answer to "I hear you just fine", suggests Velasquez.

Virtual kidnapping

A call from a supposed kidnapper who claims to have a loved one is horrifying, but don't jump to pay a ransom. Scammers preying on fear are cold-calling numbers, ...

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