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This Could Be You

Small moments where five seconds of checking could have changed the outcome.

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  • BANK SCAM

    Joe followed the alert.

    • Joe received a "bank verification" message.
    • His colleagues warned him it looked suspicious.
    • He followed the instructions anyway.

    By evening, his account was compromised.

    Check before you share.

  • WHATSAPP FORWARD

    Priya sent it before reading past the headline.

    • A family-group forward claimed a local school had shut down overnight.
    • She shared it into three parent chats before checking the notice.
    • The school opened on time the next morning.

    She spent the day apologizing to anxious parents.

    Check before you share.

  • FAKE INTERNSHIP

    Aarav paid the onboarding fee.

    • The internship offer arrived with a polished logo and a short deadline.
    • It asked for a refundable training deposit.
    • He sent the money to avoid losing the role.

    The recruiter number stopped responding within an hour.

    Check before you share.

  • HEALTH CLAIM

    Nisha trusted the reel.

    • A short video promised a home remedy that could replace her prescribed tablets.
    • The comments made it sound routine and harmless.
    • She paused her treatment without speaking to a doctor.

    Her symptoms returned before the week was over.

    Check before you share.

  • GOVERNMENT SCHEME

    Ramesh believed the deadline banner.

    • A poster in a group chat claimed a new cash-benefit scheme closed at midnight.
    • It linked to an unfamiliar registration page.
    • He entered his ID details in a rush.

    He later realized the site was not an official government portal.

    Check before you share.

  • KYC ALERT

    Anita called the number on the message.

    • The SMS said her wallet would be frozen unless KYC was updated immediately.
    • The caller sounded calm, scripted, and prepared.
    • She shared her OTP to "finish verification."

    The fraud happened while she was still on the call.

    Check before you share.

  • CRYPTO FRAUD

    Dev chased the guaranteed return.

    • A friend-of-a-friend sent him a private crypto group invite.
    • The screenshots showed daily profits and zero losses.
    • He transferred a small amount just to test it.

    The platform demanded more money before any withdrawal was possible.

    Check before you share.

  • SCHOOL GROUP

    Meera forwarded the screenshot.

    • Someone posted a blurred fee-circular screenshot in the school group.
    • It looked urgent and expensive.
    • She sent it to other parents before confirming it with the school office.

    The screenshot turned out to be an old notice taken out of context.

    Check before you share.

  • FAMILY GROUP

    Sanjay wanted to be helpful.

    • A relative shared a message about a dangerous product recall.
    • He pushed it into every family subgroup within minutes.
    • Nobody noticed the message was from years earlier.

    His warning created panic over a product that was still on shelves legitimately.

    Check before you share.

  • BREAKING NEWS

    Asma posted before the facts settled.

    • A fast-moving post claimed a major fire had shut part of the city.
    • The image looked real enough to believe.
    • She reposted it before any local authority confirmed the incident.

    Friends reached out in alarm about an event that had not happened there.

    Check before you share.

  • BANK SCAM

    Karan trusted the "executive."

    • The caller knew his name and the last four digits of his card.
    • That made the request feel official.
    • He installed the remote-access app they asked for.

    He watched money move out of his account in real time.

    Check before you share.

  • WHATSAPP FORWARD

    Leena forwarded the warning voice note.

    • The audio claimed a local market would be sealed the next morning.
    • It sounded personal, emotional, and immediate.
    • She believed the urgency and passed it along.

    Shop owners lost a morning responding to a rumor.

    Check before you share.

  • FAKE INTERNSHIP

    Zoya sent her documents too early.

    • The offer letter looked neat and the email domain was close to a real brand.
    • It asked for ID proof before the interview slot could be locked.
    • She shared everything to stay in the process.

    Her information was handed over to strangers before any employer existed.

    Check before you share.

  • HEALTH CLAIM

    Vikram repeated the claim at home.

    • A forwarded message said a common kitchen ingredient could "flush toxins" in one night.
    • He treated it like useful advice, not medical advice.
    • The message was shared again at dinner as if it were settled fact.

    The bad information spread faster than the correction ever did.

    Check before you share.

  • GOVERNMENT SCHEME

    Farah clicked because the page looked familiar.

    • The fake portal copied the colors and language of a real public-service site.
    • It asked for account details to "release benefits."
    • She assumed the design meant it was legitimate.

    The form captured enough information to become a second problem later.

    Check before you share.

  • KYC ALERT

    Imran ignored the wording and reacted to the threat.

    • The message said his salary account would be blocked before lunch.
    • The link was shortened and impossible to identify at a glance.
    • He tapped first and questioned it second.

    His morning turned into damage control over a message that was never from his bank.

    Check before you share.

  • RETURN TO ANALYZER

    Before it spreads, check it.

    Most people realize something was fake only after they have already trusted it, clicked it, or shared it.

    Test a Real Message