Don’t tell me, scambot, you know a Nigerian prince
Who just wants to keep his money, in our account
Oh, our device is infected, and you can fix it, for free
You just need to be an admin, to get us the discount
Just add our bank details, err no!
Just change our password, err no!
Just click this scammy link
So we all know where you go…
…On the gullible, susceptible, influenceable list
We sell to suppliers, we know that you know
Digital extorsion scraping scambots
Plug the cash as unholy sacraments
Or a quota of your digital resources
‘Or there may be some little accidents’
They don’t want your mind
They don’t want your body
They don’t even want your wife
It used to be they wanted money
But now it’s your bandwidth, or your life!
“Our clients have seen a wave of “phishing” attempts in which scammers are impersonating us. They send requests—sometimes by text, sometimes by email—for urgent updates of client information (often bank or other key information) and include login links pointing to websites that appear legitimate but are actually fake websites.
If you click those links, you may inadvertently give bad actors access to your account.
The scammers also distort the rankings given to their fake websites in search engines (Google, Bing, etc.) so their sites appear at the top of your search results. The scammers may also place malicious advertisements, linking to their fake website, at the top of the search results.
The scammers continue to change their methods, but you can protect yourself by following a few simple rules(:)”.
Sound plausable (?) Don’t do that, do this. And you’re done.