home bbs files messages ]

Just a sample of the Echomail archive

Cooperative anarchy at its finest, still active today. Darkrealms is the Zone 1 Hub.

   CONSPRCY      How big is your tinfoil hat?      2,445 messages   

[   << oldest   |   < older   |   list   |   newer >   |   newest >>   ]

   Message 722 of 2,445   
   Mike Powell to All   
   Fake jobs and phone calls   
   12 Mar 25 08:42:00   
   
   TZUTC: -0500   
   MSGID: 437.consprcy@1:2320/105 2c36c9af   
   PID: Synchronet 3.20a-Linux master/acc19483f Apr 26 202 GCC 12.2.0   
   TID: SBBSecho 3.20-Linux master/acc19483f Apr 26 2024 23:04 GCC 12.2.0   
   BBSID: CAPCITY2   
   CHRS: ASCII 1   
   Fake jobs and phone calls: How Americans lost $12.5 bn to fraud in 2024   
      
   Date:   
   Tue, 11 Mar 2025 17:15:00 +0000   
      
   Description:   
   Americans lost $2.5 billion more money to scams in 2024 than the previous   
   year.   
      
   FULL STORY   
   ======================================================================   
    - In 2024, Americans lost $12.5 billion to scams, up $2.5bn year-on-year   
    - Scams originating online outperformed more traditional methods   
    - The elderly are no longer the ones losing most money   
      
   American citizens lost $12.5 billion to different kinds of fraud in 2024, a   
   new report from the US Federal Trade Commission (FTC) has claimed, meaning    
   the number is up by $2.5 billion compared to the year before.    
      
   Fraud is not getting more frequent, the FTC says, but it is getting more   
   expensive. One in three people who reported fraud in 2024 said they lost   
   money, up from one in four last year.    
      
   Of the $12.5 billion, a huge chunk (more than $3 billion) came from scams    
   that originated online, heavily outpacing the roughly $1.9 billion lost to   
   more traditional scams (phone calls, for example). Phone calls, however, led   
   to higher total losses, with victims losing a median of $1,500 per person,    
   and scams going through bank transfers and payments accounted for $2 billion   
   in losses, more than any other payment method. Cryptocurrency scams came in   
   second with $1.4 billion drained.   
      
   Investment scams    
      
   Investment scams were the real money-makers for fraudsters, FTC further said,   
   with four in five (79%) people who reported an investment scam actually    
   losing money. The median loss was north of $9,000. Total losses from   
   investment scams hit $5.7 billion, a $1 billion increase from last year.    
      
   Social media continues to be a major risk factor, as well, with seven in ten   
   people who were contacted by scammers on social platforms losing money. Total   
   losses through these platforms reached $1.9 billion, it was said.    
      
   One particular scam format - fake jobs - skyrocketed over the last half a   
   decade. Between 2020 and 2024, reports nearly tripled, and losses ballooned   
   from $90 million to $501 million.    
      
   Interestingly enough, the older generation is no longer the one losing most   
   money. Those aged 20-29 reported losing money more often than any other age   
   group. However, the elderly (70+) suffered far worse financial damage than    
   any other demographic.    
      
    Via BleepingComputer   
      
   ======================================================================   
   Link to news story:   
   https://www.techradar.com/pro/security/fake-jobs-and-phone-calls-how-americans   
   -lost-usd12-5-bn-to-fraud-in-2024   
      
      
   $$   
   --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux   
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (1:2320/105)   
   SEEN-BY: 105/81 106/201 128/187 129/305 153/7715 154/110 218/700 226/30   
   SEEN-BY: 227/114 229/110 111 114 206 300 307 317 400 426 428 470 664   
   SEEN-BY: 229/700 705 266/512 291/111 320/219 322/757 342/200 396/45   
   SEEN-BY: 460/58 712/848 902/26 2320/0 105 3634/12 5075/35   
   PATH: 2320/105 229/426   
      

[   << oldest   |   < older   |   list   |   newer >   |   newest >>   ]


(c) 1994,  bbs@darkrealms.ca