Edited by Omer Aktas
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Support rule: Real support should not pressure you to give remote access, buy gift cards, reveal passwords, or pay through a surprise pop-up.
Short answer
A fake tech support scam is a message, pop-up, call, or email that claims your phone, computer, account, or antivirus has a serious problem. The scammer may ask for remote access, payment, gift cards, passwords, or security codes. Close the message and contact real support through official channels.
How AI makes it harder to spot
Old tech support scams often had bad spelling or strange wording. AI can now help scammers write cleaner pop-ups, realistic chat scripts, and professional emails. A message can sound calm and official while still being fake. That is why behavior matters more than wording.
Warning signs
| Warning sign | What it may mean | Safer response |
|---|---|---|
| Remote access request | They want control of your device. | Do not install remote-control software. |
| Gift card payment | Legitimate support does not fix devices with gift cards. | Refuse and end the contact. |
| Urgent virus warning | The warning may be fake. | Close the browser or restart the device. |
| Password or code request | They may be trying to take over an account. | Never share login codes. |
| Refund or overpayment story | They may lead you into a bank scam. | Do not open banking while connected. |
What to do if a pop-up will not close
Do not call the phone number on the pop-up. Try closing the browser tab. If that does not work, close the browser completely or restart the device. If you are unsure, ask a trusted person before following any instructions on the screen.
Try this prompt
“Explain whether this tech support message has scam warning signs. Look for remote access, payment requests, urgency, passwords, security codes, and fake company claims: [paste the message without private details].”
If you gave remote access
Disconnect from the call or session. Turn off the device if you do not know how to disconnect. From another safe device, change important passwords. Contact your bank if you opened banking, payment apps, or financial accounts while the scammer had access.
Official support habit
If you need help from Microsoft, Apple, Google, your phone provider, or your internet company, go through the official website, official app, or a phone number from a bill or device documentation. Do not trust a number that appears in a surprise pop-up.
Safety note
Do not let anyone watch you log in to bank, email, tax, health, or password-manager accounts through screen sharing unless you are absolutely sure they are legitimate and you started the support request through an official route.
Quick summary
Fake tech support scams use fear and urgency. Do not give remote access, passwords, codes, or payment. Close the pop-up, use official support channels, and ask a trusted person for help if you feel pressured.