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Frequently Asked Questions

About Phone Scam

Fast answer

Phone Scam FAQ at a glance

Phone scams use live callers, robocalls, spoofed caller ID, and fear or urgency to push victims into sharing data, granting access, or sending money.

  • What is Phone Scam? Phone scams use live callers, robocalls, spoofed caller ID, and fear or urgency to push victims into sharing data, granting access, or sending money.
1 What is Phone Scam?

Phone scams use live callers, robocalls, spoofed caller ID, and fear or urgency to push victims into sharing data, granting access, or sending money.

2 How does Phone Scam work?

You receive a call that appears to come from a bank, government agency, delivery company, employer, or family member in trouble. The caller creates pressure with threats, fake fraud alerts, payment demands, or instructions to keep the situation secret. If you stay on the line, the scammer pushes for sensitive details, remote access, gift cards, crypto, or wire transfers.

3 How can I protect myself from Phone Scam?

Hang up and call the organization back using an official number you find yourself. Do not trust caller ID alone because numbers can be spoofed. Never share one-time passcodes, account passwords, or payment details on an incoming call. Use call blocking tools and report repeated scam numbers to your carrier.

4 What should I do if I am targeted by Phone Scam?

Stop contact, save evidence, and verify the situation through official channels before sending money or information. If you shared financial details, contact your bank right away and report the incident to the FTC at ftc.gov/complaint.

5 How do I report Phone Scam?

Report it to the FTC at ftc.gov/complaint, the impersonated company or platform, and local authorities if money, identity information, or account access was involved.

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