Americans lost $10 billion to fraud in 2023, with $1.4 billion worth starting on social media, according to the FTC.
The sites look very official, but they just steal your money and don't deliver any toys.
Scammers often reach out to people via text or email and say they’ll deposit a check into their accounts to pay for their services and installation. It’s fake.
Some users have reported getting hundreds of “reset password” requests on their Apple devices and even fake calls from Apple Support.
"It’s been a bit of a nightmare," one of the actors told Gizmodo.
This holiday season, make sure you're only getting ripped off by corporate America, not cybercriminals.
The FBI is reportedly trying to track down the people who used a common crypto airdrop scam to swindle Tether taken as part of a current drug investigation.
The erroneous press release could be illegal as it had the potential to move markets with false information.
A man in China lost 4.3 million Yuan after receiving a video call from a scammer who used AI software to replicate the face and voice of his supposed friend.
An FBI report has revealed what types of scams are affecting Americans including how much money was relinquished last year.
Former Twitter employees received emails Saturday confirming a severance package email that was forwarded to spam was not a "phishing attempt."
Scammers never sleep. They pay close attention to the news cycle, so they can have just the right info to scam you.
Hackers have been going after Facebook ad accounts for years, but multiple reports show how LinkedIn has become a major resource for phishing expeditions.
The con is a bizarre mashup of a romance scam and an investment scheme.
The screenshot showed a New York Post headline warning of a 'massive refugee movement,' prompting social media users to panic.
The uptick in scammery is so bad that about one in four dollars stolen via fraud is now being reported stolen using crypto, according to the FTC.
Attempts to steal your data from text messages are reportedly on the rise.
An unknown threat actor has targeted the email marketing company in a sophisticated scheme to phish physical cryptocurrency wallets.
It's tax season again, and the scammers are out. Avoid these clear and present dangers.
Last year, the agency said that people sent $547 million to their scheming virtual sweethearts, who were really scammers.