The exact same money scam that fleeced a lot of people in r/portland is currently being used in r/oregon. I gave few of the people who already sent money a heads up, even though I know for certain they are going to be angry with me. People who are happy they did a good thing don't like being told they've been taken advantage of.
I can't count how often I've proved that medical Go Fund Mes or missing kid info posted to communities posted to forums I've modded were fraudulent. It got to the point that I didn't even need to google reverse image search, I literally recognized some of the images that it's popular for scammers to use. I even knew the real story behind one picture, and that the family was fully and painfully aware of the way that image was being used online.
Sorry, venting here because I can't believe that literally the same copy-pasta is being used to scam people again. Also, based on all my years of internetting and sometimes being in charge of checking posts to see if they are scams, if I check that reddit account again it will be full of people shooting the messenger. Or I could just not... I could ditch that account and get a new one.
Covid has been good for grifters. The stress and people not feeling connected enough has made people easier targets. Now it's the holidays with a new variant taking hold and honestly I am so far beyond what I thought my breaking point was.
Anyway, a community I am in just got scammed for a lot of money and I am going to have everyone yelling at me for pointing it out because that is how life works. Maybe I should keep my mouth just and let people get taken for a ride.
I can't count how often I've proved that medical Go Fund Mes or missing kid info posted to communities posted to forums I've modded were fraudulent. It got to the point that I didn't even need to google reverse image search, I literally recognized some of the images that it's popular for scammers to use. I even knew the real story behind one picture, and that the family was fully and painfully aware of the way that image was being used online.
Sorry, venting here because I can't believe that literally the same copy-pasta is being used to scam people again. Also, based on all my years of internetting and sometimes being in charge of checking posts to see if they are scams, if I check that reddit account again it will be full of people shooting the messenger. Or I could just not... I could ditch that account and get a new one.
Covid has been good for grifters. The stress and people not feeling connected enough has made people easier targets. Now it's the holidays with a new variant taking hold and honestly I am so far beyond what I thought my breaking point was.
Anyway, a community I am in just got scammed for a lot of money and I am going to have everyone yelling at me for pointing it out because that is how life works. Maybe I should keep my mouth just and let people get taken for a ride.
no subject
Date: 2021-12-22 03:03 am (UTC)From:But it doesn't surprise me that the ratio of scam to legitimate is a bad one.
I do understand the desire to help. And when that help is individual, it can feel like more - donating to a food bank, you may help more people in small ways, but usually you don't see how and who YOUR donation helped specifically. Donating to an individual feels like you make a more tangible difference. Mutual aid is great! I do get it!
But unfortunately, an awful lot of the scammers are savvy enough to find exactly the right heartstrings to tug on for their target community. Is this on behalf of a sick kid? A down-on-their-luck veteran? A trans teen just kicked out of their abusive home? Someone with just the right blend of intersectional marginalizations to make you feel extra good about donating?
All of those can be perfectly legitimate causes, and people who need help! And people I want to help! But scammers know that very, very well.
no subject
Date: 2021-12-22 09:58 pm (UTC)From:Earlier in the pandemic, there was a huge rash of race-faking. There was a good article on people faking being Native Americans that talked about how if you don't have the traumas an baggage of actually being Native, you can easily mold yourself into exactly what white people want to see.
no subject
Date: 2021-12-23 04:52 am (UTC)From:Oh geez, I remember warnings about a few of the race-faking ones. And I can absolutely see that being a thing - the ability to play on the "ideal noble Native" tropes that white people want to see and then feel super good about themselves for supporting.