Yuma Sun

BBB Scam Alert: Innocent wrong number text or scam bot?

- Better Business Bureau John Hessinger Yuma-based John Hessinger is community developmen­t director of the Better Business Bureau serving the Pacific Southwest. Contact him at john. hessinger@bbbcommuni­ty.org or 928919-7940.

Anew text message scam seems so innocent that it’s tempting to reply. But con artists are using phony “wrong number” texts to lure victims into conversati­on and falling for a scam.

HOW THE SCAM WORKS

You receive a text that reads something like this: “Hey is this John? It’s Amanda. We chatted on Tinder before when I came to visit my cousin but we never met IRL. I’m back in town if you want to meet up this time, are you free?”

If you reply to a text like this, even with a polite, “Sorry, wrong number,” the stranger responds anyway, seemingly ignoring your answer. Usually, you’ll receive a few compliment­s and some photos of “Amanda,” who appears to be a scantily clad blonde woman. However, as the word gets out about this scam, scammers will change up the names, backstory, and photos.

If you continue to engage with the stranger, who is really a chat bot, it tries to trick you into registerin­g for dating or adult websites. Your new “friend” will encourage you to sign up for a specific website to see more explicit photos, which may involve offering up your credit card number. Considerin­g the dubious

nature of this scam, if you hand over your credit card informatio­n at any point, you could be putting yourself at risk for fraudulent charges and identity theft. To avoid chat bot scams: • Ignore texts from strangers. If you receive a text from someone you don’t know, simply don’t reply. It’s the safest route. If you engage with a scammer,

even briefly, they will mark your number as active and you could receive even more shady texts in the future.

• Block numbers that appear to come from scammers. Unsolicite­d texts that look like they come from a chat bot or that ask you to click on suspicious links are probably not safe. Block these numbers to

prevent scammers from contacting you through them again.

• Never give your personal informatio­n to strangers. Never share your credit card or banking informatio­n, your full name, home address, or social security number with someone you never met in person.

If you’ve been the victim

of a text message scam, report it at BBB.org/ScamTracke­r. Your report can help expose scammers’ tactics so others won’t fall prey.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES VIA BBB ?? CON ARTISTS are using phony “wrong number” texts to lure victims into conversati­on and falling for a scam.
GETTY IMAGES VIA BBB CON ARTISTS are using phony “wrong number” texts to lure victims into conversati­on and falling for a scam.
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