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133 sats \ 22 replies \ @siggy47 2h
The guy who tried to scam me on orange club app also tried to move our conversation to signal, and he impersonated a fairly prominent bitcoiner. I wonder if this is a trend. Edit: Holy Shit! I just watched the video. This must be the same guy. I had the identical conversation two days ago. Same story. He claimed to be buying miners in Philadelphia, and just needed a loan for 24 hours. He impersonated someone I trusted.
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69 sats \ 9 replies \ @optimism 2h
I already suggested the 4 words to use when someone asks you for 10M sats the other day, lol.
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the whole thing with the video is also a bit suspicious... Not even to my closest irl fiend will give 10M sats just like that by a chat... something is not smelling good with this video. I post it just for fun.
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136 sats \ 3 replies \ @optimism 1h
I think that there are many people that will fall for this shit, because they "trust" technology that is said to be secure. But security is a process.
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100 sats \ 2 replies \ @siggy47 1h
You might be right. I'm sure people who fall for it feel humiliated and don't talk about it. I'm wondering how often it is successful.
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136 sats \ 0 replies \ @optimism 1h
It's very humiliating, but it's useful to talk about it. As you see we've now uncovered a pattern because people talked about it, so thanks for doing that. Collaborative threat identification is extremely powerful.
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I'm wondering how often it is successful.
many times unfortunately... You cannot imagine how many people are contacting me in private to tell me that they were scammed... is really sad, and I cannot do too much for them. Some of them I rescued right on time, but some of them was too late.
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136 sats \ 3 replies \ @siggy47 1h
He must have known I was a shrimp, not a whale. He asked me for a lot less than he asked Jor. I'm insulted 😀
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buahahahaha Always play the "poor guy" card...
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"I'd like to borrow 100 sats for 24 hours, just to get my miner in Philadelphia set up..."
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yeah that crack me up... wtf, you still don't see the scam?
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136 sats \ 6 replies \ @optimism 1h
Re: edit. That's what I thought. It's just a bunch of kids with a call list. What you should worry about is how you got on the list.
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133 sats \ 2 replies \ @siggy47 1h
I'm not sure what it costs to join Club Orange, but it's kind of a high bar just to run a failed scam and get barred from the site. Whoever did it must have been confident in his abilities to make that investment. I'm not so sure it's just kids.
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136 sats \ 1 reply \ @optimism 1h
Kids are often being recruited by syndicates - like the ones operating the scam compounds in Myanmar. They are vulnerable, uncertain and want to make a quick buck. The investment is not done by the person you talked with.
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This reminds me of this Hacked podcast episode, talking about this scenario
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What you should worry about is how you got on the list.
very few even think about... Because they still do not know how to separate the public from private.
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Because they still do not know how to separate the public from private.
This is one of the smartest things you mention in your guides, by the way. It would go a long way toward stopping incidents like the OP if people implemented it.
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I asked this question here on SN and seems that few people know the answer about who is "darthcoin" #1251738
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I was just thinking about downloading the orange club app to try to connect with other Bitcoiners near me but is the alternative more dangerous? Should I not download it?
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This can happen literally anywhere you interact with people, even SN or Nostr.
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The app in itself is not dangerous... the people that are also joining and trying to scam you are the problem. Scammers will always be everywhere, so just stay vigilant. If something doesn't smell right, then is a scam and you have options to report them.
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0 sats \ 0 replies \ @siggy47 1h
Exactly.
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impersonating is a real danger but also education how to deal with these cheap scam is required. I never got scammed on chat messenger because I simply tell them to fuck off (Darth's style) and my messengers are very well controlled and limited.
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136 sats \ 8 replies \ @optimism 2h
Settings -> Privacy -> Phone number -> Who can find me by number -> Nobody.
No more scammers.
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basic steps for all chat msgnrs. But i think in this case was something else because he says that was contacted by a trusted user not a random.
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100 sats \ 4 replies \ @siggy47 1h
I think the scammer impersonated the trusted user too. That's what happened with me.
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That means orangepill app have a flaw. On TG for example, you can easily see the userID that is not the same, even that they put in the bio same user name...
Sometimes I just try to scam the scammers and send them a LN invoice of 100k sats to pay before I will start talking.
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100 sats \ 1 reply \ @siggy47 1h
Good point. I asked Matt about that. You can't distinguish a real account from an impersonator.
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unique ID in TG
Then you can use Rose bot to block any scammer. So your online life is so quiet and clean of scammers.
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36 sats \ 0 replies \ @optimism 1h
send them a LN invoice of 100k sats to pay before I will start talking.
This made me cry laughing lol
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100 sats \ 1 reply \ @optimism 2h
Yes, his friend introduced the scammer haha.
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buahahaha BTC sessions
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Suspicious or not, it is completely true that the "mind has no firewall." Bad actors want to catch you acting without thinking—and how the fuck can any security protect you from pressing send yourself?
Everyone thinks they would "never" do that, but people will do anything if the narrative in their mind makes it the logical conclusion. The point of social engineering is precisely to weave that narrative so that you fuck up irreversibly.
That said, this is easy to avoid when you control who can access you and where: it would be kind of weird for "Mom" to be writing to you from Nostr.
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good points
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