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Digital & Tech

How to spot online scams

Scams have gotten slick — fake login pages, urgent texts, even AI voice clones of people you know. The defenses, luckily, are simple and the same.

Dad's Quick Take

Scams rely on urgency and trust. Don't click links in unexpected messages, verify requests through a channel you trust, never pay with gift cards or crypto on demand, and slow down when something feels urgent. When in doubt, stop and check.

Common scams right now

The golden rule

If a message creates urgency and wants money or your password, stop. Contact the person or company directly using a number you already trust — not the one in the message.

Common questions

How do I check a suspicious link?

Don't click it. Go to the company's site directly by typing the address yourself, or use their official app. Hover to preview the real URL on a computer.

A 'relative' called in a panic for money — real?

Be suspicious of urgent money requests, even in a familiar voice. Hang up and call them back on their known number to verify.

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