• Protect Yourself: Malware, Ponzi Schemes, and Phishing Scams Exposed
    Jan 14 2026
    Hey listeners, Scotty here, your go-to scam buster with a techie twist on the wild world of cyber crooks. Picture this: you're clicking through an online checkout, card details flying, when sneaky Magecart skimmers—those JavaScript vampires from Malwarebytes reports—suck up your American Express, Mastercard, or Discover data right from major payment networks like AmEx and Diners Club. This campaign's been lurking since 2022, exploiting e-commerce weak spots, so shop owners, patch your CMS now, and you, grab Malwarebytes Browser Guard to block those malicious scripts before they feast.

    Speaking of long cons, Ponzi kingpin Renwick Haddow's sentencing just got bumped from January 28 to April 29 by the New York Southern District Court, per FX News Group. This guy's been cooperating from Morocco and the Bahamas, liquidating assets from his Bitcoin Store and Bar Works scams that fleeced investors since 2014 with fake crypto platforms and co-working hype. Arrested back in 2017, he's still dodging the slam while victims wait—classic delay tactic.

    Over in King County, Washington, scammers are posing as deputies from the Sheriff's Office, blasting calls about missed jury duty and fake arrest warrants, as KIRO7 exposed. Sergeant Val Kelly warns they'll demand instant phone payments or threaten cuffs—total BS. Real cops don't call for cash like that; hang up, hit the non-emergency line, and check socials for alerts. Snohomish County's seeing it too.

    AARP Pennsylvania's fraud squad, via PR Newswire on January 13, flags five 2026 nasties hitting seniors hard: phony employment gigs demanding fees, recovery scams charging to "fix" prior rip-offs, digital arrest video terrors, "Hello pervert" blackmail emails, and romance hustles pushing crypto. Losses for 60-plus folks hit $445 million in 2024 alone, and AI's making 'em slicker.

    Then there's the massive 2026 breach dumping passwords from big tech platforms, screaming PCMatic's wake-up: ditch password recycling now. Hackers shotgun stolen creds from Netflix to your bank—stop 'em with unique 12+ char beasts in a password manager, crank on multi-factor auth everywhere, scan browser saves with Google's Password Checkup, and freeze your credit.

    In Denver, the city government's blasting warnings about fake rezoning fee emails from bogus denvergov@usa.com addresses, as their Tech Services confirmed January 13. Chief Info Sec Officer Merlin Namuth says pause on urgency—verify first.

    Listeners, arm up: unique passwords, 2FA like a digital moat, sniff phishing by spotting urgent threats or bad grammar, overshare nothing online, and research investments via FCA registers. Update apps, buy tickets from STAR-approved spots, monitor statements. Scammers evolve, but you're the boss—stay vigilant, breathe, verify.

    Thanks for tuning in, smash that subscribe button for more scam-smashing tips. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.

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    4 mins
  • Beware the Newest Scams Sweeping Your Feeds: A Scam Nerd's Guide to Staying Safe in 2026
    Jan 11 2026
    Hey listeners, Scotty here, your friendly neighborhood scam nerd, and we’re diving straight into the freshest fraud hitting your feeds this week.

    Let’s start in Chicago. ABC7 Chicago reports that the Better Business Bureau just dropped its 2026 list of top scams, and online purchase scams are number one for the sixth year running. Fake shopping sites, especially for pets, plus bogus Amazon, Apple, and Walmart lookalike pages are vacuuming up card numbers and never shipping a thing. Right behind that: classic phishing and fake work-from-home job offers that ask you to “buy equipment” or “pay for training” up front. The BBB’s Steve Bernas says scammers are now mixing in AI and deepfakes during fake job interviews, which is cyberpunk-level evil, but here we are.

    Now jump to New Delhi. The Times of India reports a retired doctor couple in Greater Kailash lost about 15 crore rupees in what cops call a “digital arrest” scam. Scammers pretended to be TRAI officials and Mumbai Police, accused them of money laundering, then kept them on video calls for two weeks, isolating them and forcing transfers “for verification.” That’s not hacking computers, that’s hacking nervous systems. If anyone claims to be law enforcement, threatens arrest, and tells you not to talk to anyone: hang up, look up the official number yourself, and call back on your own.

    In the U.S., WHIO in Ohio says the Preble County Sheriff’s Office is warning about crooks calling families of people in jail, pretending to be from the jail, and demanding $500 on PayPal for an ankle monitor so their loved one can be released. Coconino County’s Superior Court in Arizona is seeing something similar: fake detention facility staff claiming there’s a court order and a warrant unless you pay up. Real cops and real courts do not call you for PayPal, gift cards, or crypto. Ever.

    Speaking of low-tech but nasty, ABC7 in Los Angeles reports Glendale police just arrested two women for running a counterfeit $100 bill scam at a dozen In-N-Out locations. That’s your reminder: scams aren’t just in your inbox; they’re standing at the counter with fries.

    For a quick defense patch: Tom’s Guide suggests cleaning up your digital life in 2026 by checking if your email’s been in a breach using Have I Been Pwned, turning on two-factor authentication everywhere, updating your router, and killing old accounts you don’t use. A Substack guide called The Internet Basics Guide That Apparently We Still Need in 2026 reminds everyone of the golden rule: your bank, Apple, the IRS, none of them will email or text asking you to click a link and type in your password or full card number.

    So here’s your Scotty short list: no urgent payments by wire, gift card, or PayPal on a phone call; no logging into anything from a link you didn’t start; verify callers using numbers you look up yourself; and if it sounds like a movie plot, treat it like a scam.

    Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so the scammers hate your newfound wisdom just a little more each week. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.

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    4 mins
  • Scam Alert: Protect Yourself from the Latest Tricks, Straight from the "Scam Nerd"
    Jan 9 2026
    Hey listeners, Scotty here, your friendly neighborhood scam nerd, coming to you from the front lines of what the bad guys have been up to this week.

    Let’s start with the phones in your pockets. Citizens National Bank in Texas just warned that scammers are spoofing the bank’s real support number and calling customers, pretending to be from “fraud prevention.” They ask for one-time passcodes, online banking passwords, even remote access to your phone. Citizens National Bank says they will never call you for that info, so if someone does, you hang up, flip your card over, call the number on the back, and verify for yourself.

    The same playbook is hitting taxes. The IRS is warning about phishing emails, sketchy texts, and social media “tax tips” that tell you to lie on returns or claim secret credits. The IRS reminds everyone: they do not email, text, or DM you demanding immediate payment. If a “tax agent” is rushing you, it’s not compliance, it’s a con.

    Scams aren’t just digital theory either; people are getting arrested. In Cambodia, ANC News reports that authorities just picked up an alleged mastermind and two others behind a massive crypto scam targeting investors in China. Police say they lured victims with fake high-return investments, then moved the money through crypto and shell companies before extradition caught up with them. When you hear “guaranteed” profits in crypto, remember that story and walk away.

    On the U.S. side, EastIdahoNews, via Danielle Kingston of A+ Idaho Bail Bonds, is flagging a brutal jail-bond scam. Callers pretend to be law enforcement or a bail bond company and tell you your jailed family member will be “re-arrested” unless you pay more for things like ankle monitors. They use real inmate details pulled from public rosters to sound legit. The Bonneville County Sheriff’s Office says: don’t pay a dime until you hang up and call the jail, the court, or your actual bondsman on a verified number.

    And then there’s 2026’s favorite villain: AI. Choice in Australia is warning about AI video clones, where scammers deepfake celebrities like Kevin Costner or even your boss and hop on a video call asking for money. Veriff’s new fraud report says criminals are now using AI to mass-generate fake documents, voices, and faces, making romance scams and investment schemes look painfully real.

    Here’s what I want you to remember to dodge all of this. First, slow down; urgency is a weapon. Second, never give one-time passcodes, full card numbers, or remote access to anyone who contacts you first, no matter what name shows on caller ID. Third, verify using your own channel: numbers from official sites, your card, or a saved contact you trust. And finally, be skeptical of anything that feels custom-made for you: the perfect investment, the perfect partner, or the perfect panic.

    Thanks for tuning in, listeners, and don’t forget to subscribe so Scotty can keep you one patch ahead of the scammers. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.

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    3 mins
  • Scam Busting in the Age of AI: Protect Yourself from Evolving Frauds
    Jan 7 2026
    Hey listeners, Scotty here, your go-to scam buster with a techie twist and a side of snark. It's early 2026, and the fraudsters are already cranking up the AI engines, but I've got the latest dirt from the wires to keep you one step ahead. Picture this: you're scrolling social media, and bam—a too-good-to-be-true hoodie ad pops up for 20 bucks instead of 120. That's straight out of the Better Business Bureau's playbook, as Paula Fleming warned on WPRI's 12 Responds just last week. One victim shelled out 160 bucks for a fake buy-one-get-two-free retail site that vanished like a ghost in the matrix. These counterfeit kings are using AI to make bogus purses look legit—sneaky, right?

    But hold onto your keyboards, because impersonation scams are exploding. WSLS reports from Philadelphia that fraudsters, hyped by Drexel University's CIO Pablo Molina, are cloning voices and whipping up deepfake videos that could fool your grandma—or you. They prey on urgency: "Pay now or jail!" Investments and job scams top the 2026 hit list too. AARP Nebraska's alerts nail it—scammers dangle work-from-home gigs on WhatsApp or Telegram, demanding your Social Security number or upfront cash for "training kits." One poor soul lost 120 grand in an employment task hustle tied to a fake mentor.

    Then there's the U.S. Marshals Service in Seattle's Western District of Washington dropping a bombshell on January 5 via the DOJ: phony court order emails with real-looking case numbers, judge signatures, and even a "Did you know" footer pushing Bitcoin payments to dodge arrest for missed jury duty. Spoofed caller IDs from courthouses? Classic. They want wire transfers, Green Dot cards, or crypto—never gonna happen with real Marshals, folks. Call Seattle at 206-370-8600 to verify.

    AI's the big bad wolf this year, per experts everywhere from Archwell Health to Feedzai predictions. Romance texts from "loved ones in jail," utility shutoff panics in cold snaps, or family emergencies—pause, SLAM those emails: check Sender, Links, Attachments, Message. Hover, don't click. Silence unknown callers on your iPhone or Android. Report to FTC, IC3, or AARP's helpline at 877-908-3360. Monitor credit at annualcreditreport.com, enable MFA, grab a password manager.

    Listeners, stay vigilant—verify everything, greed be damned. Thanks for tuning in, smash that subscribe button for more scam-smashing tips. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai. Stay safe out there!

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    4 mins
  • Cybercrime Apocalypse: Navigating the Wild Web of Scams in 2026
    Jan 5 2026
    Hey listeners, Scotty here, your go-to scam slayer with a techie twist on the wild cyber jungle. Buckle up, because the past few days have been a scam apocalypse, and today, January 5th, 2026, we're dodging fresh bullets from the dark web.

    Picture this: I'm scrolling my feeds, and bam—Condé Nast just got gutted. Hacker alias Lovely dropped 2.3 million WIRED subscriber records on Breach Stars forum December 20th, exposing emails, names, addresses, and phone numbers from decades back. SecurityWeek and BleepingComputer confirm it stemmed from IDOR flaws and broken access controls in their account system. Lovely, who first played white-hat researcher via DataBreaches.net in late November, went rogue after Condé Nast ghosted vulnerability reports. Now they're threatening 40 million more records from other titles. No passwords leaked, but phishing crews are salivating—watch for fake WIRED emails begging credential resets. Change reused passwords now, folks, and enable MFA everywhere.

    Switching gears, Free Range Diva's YouTube alert from January 4th nails the new bank scam twist: you get a shady email from "your bank," smartly avoid the link, search Bank of America yourself... but land on bank4amea.com or onebankofamerica.com. No padlock? Misspellings? X out and call directly. Cheryl warns QR codes are rigged too—public ones zap you to fake logins. Amazon smishing exploded: texts about returns with malicious links mimicking the real deal. Always hit amazon.com straight, never click unsolicited.

    Over in cyber breach hell, Integrity360 reports 2025's ransomware rampage by Scattered Spider hit UK giants like Marks & Spencer, Co-op, Harrods, and Jaguar Land Rover factories in the UK, Slovakia, Brazil. Social engineering via third-party suppliers let them exfil data and extort. TransUnion spilled 4.46 million US consumer records alongside Google and Qantas hits by ShinyHunters. Lesson? Vendors are backdoors.

    Fresh today: Hong Kong Monetary Authority blasts fake Bank of China Hong Kong sites, login screens, and apps. No real bank SMSes hyperlinks or begs OTPs. FightCybercrime.org echoes: passphrase passwords, MFA, DuckDuckGo browser, shun public WiFi for banking. New Zealand's ManageMyHealth hack and MetaMask 2FA phishing prove nowhere's safe.

    Pro tip from my hacker hunts: AI deepfakes are 2026's nuke—Malwarebytes says they're making scams uncannily real, per ABA Banking Journal's toll-text smishing grabbing card details then OTPs for wallet loads. Trust gut, double-check URLs, ignore unsolicited investments like that Cardano Eternl wallet crypto lure from DB Digest.

    Stay vigilant, enable MFA, update browsers, freeze credit. You're smarter than these script kiddies.

    Thanks for tuning in, listeners—subscribe for more scam smackdowns. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.

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    3 mins
  • Scam Savvy: Outsmarting the Cyber Crooks in 2026
    Jan 4 2026
    Hey listeners, Scotty here, your go-to scam buster with a techie twist on the wild world of cyber crooks. We're kicking off 2026 with a bang, and the scammers are already sprinting ahead—let's shut 'em down before they swipe your stack.

    Picture this: you're scrolling Facebook, and bam, a message from Mavis Wanczyk, that Powerball jackpot queen from Springfield, Massachusetts, promising you $10,000 via Cash App. Just hand over your account deets or Quora chat fees for "insurance." Scamicide nailed it on January 2nd—fake profiles on Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, and emails hawking phony cash grants. One listener dodged it by smelling the rat; don't be the next mark feeding scammers your bank link.

    Flip to your smart home—Alexa chilling on the counter, fridge spying on your midnight snacks. Scamicide warned on January 3rd: the Internet of Things is a hacker playground. FBI's been yelling about this for years; rigs like thermostats, security cams, even toys are botnet bait. Patch those firmware updates, swap default passwords to something beastly like "QuantumFridgeHackNoWay2026!"—or boom, your Nest cams stream your life to Vlad in Vladivostok.

    Banks are getting spoofed hard too. January 1st's debit card chip scam: caller ID fakes your bank's number, says fraud hit, make you snip the chip but spill your PIN to the "rep" at your door. Empty accounts faster than a crypto crash. And TD Canada Trust estate scam from December 27th? Emails with bank logos claiming you're a long-lost heir to millions—attaché letters begging for heir fees. Spoof city.

    Data breaches? Aflac just spilled 22 million Social Security numbers, names, birthdates—courtesy of Scattered Spider hackers, per Google Threat Intelligence. University of Phoenix lost 3.5 million SSNs and bank deets to Clop ransomware gang via Oracle flaws. Kids hit hardest by synthetic ID theft, mixing real SSNs with fake names for loans.

    Crypto cons rage on, Ironcastle reports emails flooding honeypots promising $100k Bitcoin windfalls from fake mining clouds on telegra.ph pages and Google Forms. Pay a "conversion fee" to crooks' wallets—poof, gone.

    Instagram's a phishing fest, Times of India says: fake celeb accounts, urgent DMs. Slow down, spot-check, don't send. AI deepfakes clone voices from your grandkid's TikToks, begging cash.

    Dodge 'em like this: unique passphrases via 1Password or Norton 360, auto-updates, MFA everywhere. Hang up unknowns, verify via official sites—no urgency clicks. HTTPS shopping only, credit cards for buyer armor, VPN on public WiFi. Backups? Non-negotiable.

    Stay frosty, listeners—scammers evolve, but your smarts win. Thanks for tuning in, smash that subscribe for more scam-smashing intel. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.

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    3 mins
  • Shocking Cybercrime Surge: Exposing Sophisticated Scams Targeting Millions
    Jan 2 2026
    Hey listeners, Scotty here with your cybersecurity briefing, and boy do we have some wild stuff going down right now.

    Let's kick off with the biggest headline making waves. Down in India, authorities just arrested Arpit Rathore, a key player in what's being called a digital arrest scam that hit industrialist SP Oswal for seven crore rupees. That's roughly a million dollars just for one victim. The scammers were impersonating CBI officers, which is genius in the worst way possible. They've got over two hundred mule bank accounts operating to move stolen money around. The Directorate of Enforcement is still investigating, but they've already identified nine additional cybercrime cases connected to the same operation. When you've got that kind of infrastructure, you know this isn't some amateur operation.

    Now shifting focus stateside, we're seeing a resurgence of something I've been tracking for nine years, and it's absolutely bonkers that it's still working. Mavis Wanczyk, the woman who won seven hundred fifty-eight million dollars from the Powerball in twenty seventeen, has basically become the poster child for one of the most persistent scams ever. Scammers are still impersonating her on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram, telling people they've been selected to receive ten thousand dollars. All you have to do is set up a Cash App account and hand over the details. Of course, if you do that, the scammer now controls your entire bank account linked to that app. It's predatory and it's everywhere right now.

    The truly frightening part is how sophisticated these schemes have become. Banks across America are reporting a massive uptick in impersonation scams where fraudsters use LinkedIn and social media to identify real bank employees, then call customers pretending to be those exact people. Caller ID spoofing makes it nearly impossible to verify who you're actually talking to. Meanwhile, tech support scams are hitting hard, where your computer acts up and you call a number that's completely fake, connecting you with a scammer who leads you down an absolute rabbit hole.

    We're also seeing new threats emerge from places listeners wouldn't expect. Ads on Facebook and search results are increasingly becoming gateways to fraudulent websites. Banks report that artificial intelligence is making these attacks exponentially more sophisticated. Romance scams, bail scams with forged court documents featuring real official seals, and fake tax refund messages are all ramping up heading into the busy tax season.

    The bottom line is this: never give personal information to anyone who contacts you unsolicited, assume caller ID can be faked, and verify everything through official channels using numbers you find yourself.

    Thanks for tuning in, listeners. Make sure you subscribe for more security insights. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.

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    3 mins
  • Scam Buster's Tech Twist: Unmasking 2025's Cybercrime Chaos
    Dec 31 2025
    Hey listeners, Scotty here, your go-to scam buster with a techie twist on the wild world of cyber crooks. Picture this: it's the end of 2025, and scammers are leveling up like it's a bad sequel to a hacker flick. Just yesterday, Scamicide dropped the bomb on the brushing scam's nasty comeback—Chinese vendors shipping random junk via Amazon to your door, but now with a sneaky QR code sticker screaming "Scan to see who sent this!" One zap, and bam, you're funneled to a fake site begging for your login deets or malware slurps your phone's secrets straight to identity theft central. Don't fall for it, folks—toss that package in the report bin at Amazon's unwanted goods form, keep the goodies legally, and snag a safe QR scanner app first.

    Over in crypto chaos, Coingeek's year-end roundup paints 2025 as North Korea's Lazarus Group's jackpot year—they snagged $1.5 billion from South Korea's Bybit exchange in February alone, plus $30 million from Upbit in November, a 51% haul bump from 2024. But it gets brutal: France saw Ledger founder David Balland kidnapped in January, finger sliced off for ransom; his crypto bro's dad got the same chainsaw treatment come spring. Then summer's New York townhouse torture fest on an Italian dude zapped for his private keys. Justice hit back hard—Do Kwon of Terraform Labs copped 15 years for the $40 billion Terra crash; Celsius' Alex Mashinsky drew 12; Tornado Cash's Roman Storm guilty on money laundering; Samourai Wallet's Keonne Rodriguez and William Lonergan Hill got five and four years. DOJ even seized $15 billion in BTC from pig butchering kingpin Chen 'Vincent' Zhi's wallets in October, shutting down his Southeast Asia scam empire. Pig butchering? That's romance scammers romancing you into crypto dumps, now with Telegram markets laundering $2 billion monthly per Wired and Elliptic's Tom Robinson.

    India's Economic Times warns of digital arrests—crooks posing as CBI or TRAI cops, video-calling seniors with fake FIRs, demanding UPI transfers to "clear your name." Fake QR UPI frauds, deepfake Mukesh Ambani stock tips, predatory loan apps harassing with morphed pics—cyber losses topped Rs 22,845 crore in 2024. PNC Bank's student guide nails OTP bots hijacking your MFA codes mid-login, bank impersonators, and romance cons.

    My pro tips, listeners: Trust no unsolicited QR—verify with a safe scanner. Pause on urgency; call back official numbers. Enable MFA but never share OTPs. Report to FTC at IdentityTheft.gov or 1930 in India, freeze cards pronto. Spot deepfakes by odd blinks or safe words with fam. Scammers thrive on panic—stay frosty, double-check, and you're golden.

    Thanks for tuning in, listeners—subscribe for more scam-smashing intel. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.

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    3 mins