
The old persons take on protecting your stuff
The old persons take on protecting your stuff
How to avoid being scammed
Introduction to the episode
In the first 2 episodes of "an old persons take on protecting your stuff podcast," we focused on 2 very important areas of digital hygiene and etiquette.
Passwords - unique, complex and 12 characters long or just get a password manager
Multi-factor authentication - Username = Who you are, Password = what you know and 2FA = something you own. Adding 2 FA to an account makes them more secure
So let's talk about all things SCAMMING
One of the best targets of the internet scammer are the elderly and retired.
There are a number of reasons for this:
The elderly can be gullible
The elderly are scared of new technology and systems
It is easy to scare the elderly because most of their lives that have been law-abiding citizens and the threat of police and fines has an additional impact
The elderly are easy to panic and fluster
The problem with scammers is that once they have caught you it is very hard to get away from them.
If they were successful in scamming you they will keep trying.
In this episode we are going to focus on not getting scammed
How not to be scammed on the internet
General warnings and protections
Do you know them or the organisation
Is there a problem or a prize
Do you have to do it RFN
Do they accept money or something else (gift cards, I card money transfer)
They are very clever
Never click on links, open application or click on links in SMS - Always go back to your known point of truth
Buying and selling on websites (eBay/amazon)
Never be in a hurry
Too good to be true, never
They are not the seller, they are a platform.
Always start small when bidding
Never go outside the platform to complete a transaction
Account takeovers
Trust no one
No such thing as a clearance account/company
Escrow accounts - no such animal
Scam watch
Only shop with trusted sites
Check payment security
Job Offers
Lottery
Beneficiary
Dating
Charity
Repairs
Invoice scams
Not much of an issue for the elderly but messages about changing bank account details should be avoided
Payment system scams
Match PayPal and seller's email address. If different stop sale
Avoid purchasing from social media
Dos and don'ts
Block unwanted calls
Do not give information away
Do not act immediately
Do talk to someone you trust
Use 2FA
Passwords - what did I say
Discretion on social media