Avoid Cryptocurrency Scams

Digital money (or digital currency) refers to any means of payment that exists in a purely electronic form, such as Bitcoin or the way banks can move money between themselves without there being any physical representation of the currency.

If you already own cryptocurrency, chances are it’s stored in a digital wallet and you have both public and private keys that provide access to it. Scammers try to get you to hand over the private keys – to join their ‘investment’ or to make your currency more secure or to upgrade etc.

Never hand over the private keys as you will be saying goodbye to your currency.

If you don’t have cryptocurrency but are thinking of investing in some, then only deal with well-established reputable businesses – not the ones that appear on social media or in adverts offering something better than everyone else.

Tips to Avoid Cryptocurrency Scams

  • Ignore Cold Callers: They should never be trusted. Cold callers trying to sell cryptocurrency investments are guaranteed to be scammers.
  • Avoid Social Media Adverts: Scammers often use social media to advertise fake cryptocurrency investment opportunities. The ads may look professional and you might think that because they are on Facebook or Twitter then they must be genuine but that’s not the case – anyone, including scammers can advertise almost anything on social media.
  • Too Good To Be True: Cryptocurrency scams often promise to make high returns from your initial investments that are too good to be true. Any company offering get-rich-quick investment opportunities is likely to be fraudulent and if they offer guaranteed returns then it’s definitely a scam.
  • Take Your Time: Scammers typically try to put pressure onto try to force a ‘sale’ e.g.  the offer ends anytime now, or you will be the last person accepted into this plan or something similar condition. Always take your time and do your research before making any decisions.
  • Celebrity Endorsement: A lot of scammers use fake adverts with photos of some celebrity and claim their endorsement, but these are almost always fake and clearly ridiculous. The relevant celebrities often struggle to stop the adverts using their name but the advertiser disappears before they can be found and then re-appears again with the same adverts. Plus, of course most celebrities know nothing of cryptocurrencies.

If you have any experiences with these scams do let me know, by email.

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Covid Travel Certificate Scam

There are numerous Covid scams and some of the scammers have moved off offering magic remedies and fake Covid tests to Covid passports and Travel certificates instead.

The email title is “IMPORTANT OFFICIAL Invitation for your Covid passport – Digital Covid-19 certificate (receipt #190934152220918221)”

Scammers seem to think that ridiculously long random numbers are somehow impressive.

The message contains paragraphs taken from the government website about vaccination certificates, to try to make it look genuine.

The message then claims that use of such a certificate means no need for PCR testing, quarantine or any other travel restriction or leaving or entering the country.

That bit is false of course even for genuine vaccination certificate holders.

The final part of the email is a link to click to accept the invitation and a link to click to reject it.

Both in fact lead to the same fake website designed to collect your personal information and send it to the scammer.

Make sure to use the correct government websites and to ignore such scam messages.

If you have any experiences with these scams do let me know, by email.

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Google Safe Browsing Report

Safe Browsing is a service that Google’s security team built to identify unsafe websites across the web and notify users and website owners of potential harm.

Google’s Safe Browsing technology examines billions of URLs per day looking for unsafe websites.

Google say that approximately two billion devices benefit from Google Safe Browsing technology. When Google  has identified a site as potentially harmful, Safe Browsing triggers a warning to users.

Warnings displayed per week

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

When a user of a Safe Browsing–enabled browser or APP attempts to access unsafe content on the web, they’ll see a warning page explaining that the content that they’re trying to access may be harmful.

If a site identified as harmful appears in Google Search results, there is a warning next to that site in the results.

How Google Notify Website Owners

If your website is identified as being harmful, then Google will notify you through the search console.

That details the steps to recover from an infection and gives examples of the specific code that has been injected into their site.

Further information available at https://transparencyreport.google.com/safe-browsing/search

If you have an opinion on safe browsing, do let me know, by email.

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