Beware the Newest Scams Sweeping Your Feeds: A Scam Nerd's Guide to Staying Safe in 2026 cover art

Beware the Newest Scams Sweeping Your Feeds: A Scam Nerd's Guide to Staying Safe in 2026

Beware the Newest Scams Sweeping Your Feeds: A Scam Nerd's Guide to Staying Safe in 2026

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Hey listeners, Scotty here, your friendly neighborhood scam nerd, and we’re diving straight into the freshest fraud hitting your feeds this week.

Let’s start in Chicago. ABC7 Chicago reports that the Better Business Bureau just dropped its 2026 list of top scams, and online purchase scams are number one for the sixth year running. Fake shopping sites, especially for pets, plus bogus Amazon, Apple, and Walmart lookalike pages are vacuuming up card numbers and never shipping a thing. Right behind that: classic phishing and fake work-from-home job offers that ask you to “buy equipment” or “pay for training” up front. The BBB’s Steve Bernas says scammers are now mixing in AI and deepfakes during fake job interviews, which is cyberpunk-level evil, but here we are.

Now jump to New Delhi. The Times of India reports a retired doctor couple in Greater Kailash lost about 15 crore rupees in what cops call a “digital arrest” scam. Scammers pretended to be TRAI officials and Mumbai Police, accused them of money laundering, then kept them on video calls for two weeks, isolating them and forcing transfers “for verification.” That’s not hacking computers, that’s hacking nervous systems. If anyone claims to be law enforcement, threatens arrest, and tells you not to talk to anyone: hang up, look up the official number yourself, and call back on your own.

In the U.S., WHIO in Ohio says the Preble County Sheriff’s Office is warning about crooks calling families of people in jail, pretending to be from the jail, and demanding $500 on PayPal for an ankle monitor so their loved one can be released. Coconino County’s Superior Court in Arizona is seeing something similar: fake detention facility staff claiming there’s a court order and a warrant unless you pay up. Real cops and real courts do not call you for PayPal, gift cards, or crypto. Ever.

Speaking of low-tech but nasty, ABC7 in Los Angeles reports Glendale police just arrested two women for running a counterfeit $100 bill scam at a dozen In-N-Out locations. That’s your reminder: scams aren’t just in your inbox; they’re standing at the counter with fries.

For a quick defense patch: Tom’s Guide suggests cleaning up your digital life in 2026 by checking if your email’s been in a breach using Have I Been Pwned, turning on two-factor authentication everywhere, updating your router, and killing old accounts you don’t use. A Substack guide called The Internet Basics Guide That Apparently We Still Need in 2026 reminds everyone of the golden rule: your bank, Apple, the IRS, none of them will email or text asking you to click a link and type in your password or full card number.

So here’s your Scotty short list: no urgent payments by wire, gift card, or PayPal on a phone call; no logging into anything from a link you didn’t start; verify callers using numbers you look up yourself; and if it sounds like a movie plot, treat it like a scam.

Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so the scammers hate your newfound wisdom just a little more each week. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.

For more http://www.quietplease.ai

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