Robocalls are the worst, but an even sketchier call is back with a vengeance, scamming people out hundreds of thousands of dollars.
The FBI calls it the Chinese Embassy Scam, and it comes in as a call in Chinese claiming to be from the Chinese consulate or embassy. Other versions of the scam come from a shipping company about a package waiting for them at the embassy.
SEE ALSO: The FTC just came down hard on those annoying robocall operationsThe phone numbers look legitimate, so in yet another variation of the scam when the caller says a package was found with their passport, social security card, or credit card, it's more believable. Victims are then passed onto an "investigator" from Chinese law enforcement who requests funds to resolve the problem. If they won't wire over money, they're threatened with jail or deportation. Some even ask for cryptocurrency or credit card info.
The FBI says victims are mostly of Asian descent or visiting the U.S. from China. In some cases, the scammers attack the victim again by calling their families and asking for a kidnap ransom to release the family member.
Since December 2017 more than 350 victim complaints have come in, totaling a shocking $40 million taken by scammers. The average loss is $164,000, according to the FBI's Internet Crime Complaint Center.
The scam reached its peak last year, but continues with reports coming in through February. YouMail tracks robocalls and found the February 2019 nationwide call number was almost 5 billion. But most of those are more innocuous, telling you about a fake sweepstakes you won or fabricated health insurance paperwork problems. All, however, can still be extremely frustrating.
文章
684
浏览
9
获赞
32224
Good news everyone, Logan Paul doesn't actually think the Earth is flat
Logan Paul is many things, but thankfully he is not a flat Earther. In a 50-minute, 2-second mockume'Quordle' today: See each 'Quordle' answer and hints for August 31
It's not just you. Today's Quordleis difficult, or the Quordleitself is easy, and the world is too dYouTube promises to remove abortion misinformation from the site
YouTube announced on Twitter today that it will be removing content that includes instructions for uBing Image Creator: The AI chatbot can now generate DALL
Microsoft Bing and Edge can now generate images using AI.On Tuesday, Microsoft announced Bing ImageThese $315 denim panties are deeply upsetting
"Weird, bad jeans" are practically their own fashion genre by now, and brands are well aware that maVolvo EX30 is the company's smallest electric SUV
Volvo's got a new electric SUV coming. The company hasn't given us much, though, beyond the name &ndControversial influencer Andrew Tate banned from Facebook and Instagram
Andrew Tate, the controversial social media influencer and self-help guru has been banned on all MetAt Google I/O 2023, Search gets an AI overhaul
At Google I/O 2023, the company announced major generative AI updates to its core Search product.Now'SighSwoon' merges self
Scrolling through @SighSwoon on Instagram is the equivalent of picking up a mysterious book at a threBay has banned Jeffrey Dahmer costumes
Bad news for anyone planning to dress up as Jeffrey Dahmer this Halloween: you're morally bankrupt.How to create a business page on Facebook
Facebook is infamous for the numerous ways in which folks use — and misuse — the platforSpotify takes down thousands of songs generated by AI startup Boomy
Bots beware, Spotify is cracking down on artificial streaming. Spotify took down tens of thousands oGoogle Doodle celebrates tactile paving inventor Seiichi Miyake
A new Google Doodle might cause you to appreciate what's under your feet.In a neat illustration on MGmail gets a blue checkmark to thwart phishing attempts
Here's a blue checkmark that's actually useful: Gmail has launched a new way to identify the authentNearly 25,000 Twitter users pay to subscribe to Elon Musk's exclusive tweets
After this weekend's Twitter Blue drama, debacle, guerilla marketingcampaign – whatever you wa