Safety guide

Fake Social Media Prize Scam

How to spot fake prize messages, giveaways, and brand impersonation on social platforms.

Edited by Omer Aktas

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Beginner rule: Use AI as a patient helper, not as the final authority. Keep private details out, slow down before clicking, and check important information through official sources.

Short answer

How to spot fake prize messages, giveaways, and brand impersonation on social platforms.

A simple everyday example

A fake account may say you won a phone but need to pay a small delivery fee.

First safe prompt

Check this prize message. List warning signs before I click, pay shipping, or share my details.”

Useful examples

Use AI first for low-risk tasks. Replace names, addresses, account numbers, passwords, school names, medical details, and private family information with placeholders before pasting anything.

Step-by-step

Start with one clear task. Add only the background AI needs. Ask for a simple format. Read the answer slowly. Check names, dates, prices, rules, links, and instructions before acting.

Common beginner mistake

The most common mistake is letting AI sound too confident. AI can draft, explain, compare, organize, and prepare, but you should still make the final decision.

Safety note

Real prizes should not require passwords, codes, or upfront payment through suspicious links.

What to do next

Save the prompt if it works. Reuse it with safer placeholders. For money, health, legal, identity, school, or work decisions, confirm with an official source or trusted person.