Cybersecurity for Beginners

Online Scams and Fraud

 

How Scammers Trick People — and How to Spot Them Early

 


 

What Online Scams Really Are

Online scams aren’t about technology —
they’re about manipulating people.

Scammers use:

  • Fear

  • Urgency

  • Trust

  • Greed

  • Curiosity

Anyone can be targeted. Intelligence and experience do not make someone immune.

 


Why Scams Work So Well

Scams work because:

  • They feel personal

  • They exploit emotions

  • They create pressure to act quickly

  • They imitate real organizations

The goal is to stop you from thinking clearly.

 


 

Common Types of Online Scams

Account Alert Scams

Messages claiming:

  • Suspicious activity

  • Account suspension

  • Verification required

They push you to click quickly.

 


 

Tech Support Scams

Claims that:

  • Your device is infected

  • You must call immediately

  • Payment is required to fix it

Legitimate companies don’t operate this way.

 


 

Online Shopping Scams

Fake:

  • Stores

  • Ads

  • Too-good-to-be-true deals

They collect payment and disappear.

 


 

Romance Scams

Scammers:

  • Build trust slowly

  • Create emotional bonds

  • Ask for money or favors

These scams can be deeply damaging.

 


 

Investment and Crypto Scams

Promises:

  • Guaranteed returns

  • “Limited-time” opportunities

  • Insider knowledge

If returns are guaranteed, it’s a scam.

 


 

Impersonation Scams

Scammers pretend to be:

  • Banks

  • Government agencies

  • Employers

  • Friends or family

They rely on authority and familiarity.

 


 

Red Flags That Apply to Almost All Scams

Be cautious if a message:

  • Creates urgency

  • Asks for secrecy

  • Demands unusual payment methods

  • Requests personal or login information

  • Pressures you to act now

Scammers don’t want you to verify.

 


 

Payment Methods Scammers Prefer

High-risk payment requests include:

  • Gift cards

  • Cryptocurrency

  • Wire transfers

  • Prepaid cards

These are hard to trace and reverse.

 


 

How to Protect Yourself from Scams

Good habits include:

  • Pausing before acting

  • Verifying requests independently

  • Talking to someone you trust

  • Never sharing login codes

  • Using strong account protections

Awareness is your strongest defense.

 


 

What to Do If You Think You’re Being Scammed

  • Stop communication immediately

  • Don’t send money or information

  • Save evidence (messages, emails)

  • Change passwords if needed

  • Report the scam to the platform

Early action helps limit damage.

 


 

If You’ve Already Been Scammed

You are not alone.

Steps to take:

  • Contact your bank or payment provider

  • Change affected passwords

  • Monitor accounts and credit

  • Report the incident

Blame belongs to the scammer — not the victim.

 


 

Helping Others Avoid Scams

Share knowledge with:

  • Family

  • Friends

  • Coworkers

Scams often spread through trusted networks.

 


 

Key Takeaways

  • Scams manipulate emotions, not systems

  • Urgency and secrecy are major red flags

  • Unusual payment requests are dangerous

  • Verification breaks most scams

  • Awareness protects everyone

 


 

Quick Reflection

Think about:

  • Which scam types you’ve seen before

  • Which emotions they tried to trigger

  • How you would respond next time

Preparation builds confidence.

 


 

Up Next

Next, we’ll cover data backups and recovery — how to protect your information from loss, ransomware, and accidents.