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Every week, join Sydney Waters as she helps you navigate life as a smart consumer. You'll cover everything in avoiding the latest scams, including phishing emails, medical equipment fraud, understanding layaway, hiring a reputable tax preparer, and even digital spring cleaning. Add to your toolbox and flip through your Consumer Handbook Thursdays during NPR’s Morning Edition at 6:42 a.m. and 8:42 a.m., only on KRCU.

Consumer Handbook: With Hackers Getting Bolder And Smarter, No One Is Safe From Sextortion Emails

Maik Meid/Flickr, License: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0/legalcode

With online security breaches becoming the new norm, Better Business Bureau advises consumers to be on the lookout for threatening emails. 

BBB is warning the public about sextortion emails from scammers trying to blackmail recipients into giving them money. These emails typically include threats to reveal images and videos of the victim watching or utilizing pornography, copies of their browser history, or evidence that they downloaded videos from pornographic sites. 

The increase in this type of scam is believed to be due to scammers getting access to legitimate usernames and passwords that were exposed during major security breaches. 

Here’s how the scam works. The scammer will contact people whether or not they visited pornographic sites and claim that they have hacked their computer and activated their webcam. They will share that they’ve been able to access all the porn sites the victim has visited. The scammer then threatens to send embarrassing images, videos, and screenshots to stolen contacts, family, friends, and co-workers if payment is not made. 

Recent submissions to BBB Scam Tracker show that the criminals want to be paid in bitcoin, a virtual currency that is very difficult to trace. Hackers are getting bolder and smarter, and because of this, everyone is at risk of getting a sextortion email. Scammers will happily play on a person’s emotions to trick them out of their money. 

Protect yourself. Never send compromising images of yourself to anyone, no matter who they are. No matter what the email threatens, do not respond. Also, delete the email. Do not open attachments or click links in emails from people you don’t know. Doing so could lead you to a fake website designed to trick you into giving up personal information or you may unknowingly download malware to your device.

 

Cape Girardeau native Whitney Quick is the former Regional Director of Better Business Bureau in Cape Girardeau, MO. She joined the Cape Chamber as Vice President of Programs and Leadership Development in May 2023. Quick is a graduate of Cape Girardeau Central High School and Southeast Missouri University where she majored in public relations.