Edited by Omer Aktas
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Pause first: scammers want speed, fear, secrecy, and confusion. Slowing down is protection.
Short answer
Check the sender, the link, the request, the urgency, and a second source before trusting a message.
Step-by-step
Do not click first. Look at the sender address. Ask what the message wants from you. Search for the official website yourself. Contact the person or company through a known number.
Use AI carefully
AI can help list warning signs, but do not paste private codes, passwords, or full documents into the tool.
Try this prompt
“Here is a message I received. List possible scam signs and tell me how to verify it safely. Do not ask me to click any link.”
Common mistake
Do not trust a message only because it uses your name. Scammers can know names, locations, and family details.
Safety note
Scam messages often use pressure and fear. FTC consumer guidance explains common patterns.
What to do next
If unsure, wait. Real organizations usually give you time to verify.