03/05/2026
*New Scam*
Please be vigilant
A New Scam Method!
Just 30 minutes can destroy your financial life.
This is not an ordinary phone scam — it is far more dangerous.
They don’t need your money, your password, or your trust.
They only need your kindness.
Recently, a new “help-seeking scam” has emerged, happening in malls, metro stations, markets, and other public places.
The scammers are usually well-dressed middle-aged or elderly individuals.
They say:
They don’t know how to use a phone.
They need to check their pension or subsidy.
A page has opened by mistake.
And they ask you to help them operate the phone.
The dangerous part:
When you take the phone in your hand, often:
The phone is already on a video call,
Or screen recording and facial recognition are turned on.
Someone on the other side is watching you.
You think you’re helping — but your biometric data is being collected.
This is not a regular scam — it is an AI biometric identity scam.
They don’t want your money — they want you.
If you:
Touch the phone (fingerprint),
Read numbers or verification codes aloud (voice),
Look at the screen while speaking (facial movement),
then your three major biometric identifiers — fingerprint, voice, and face — can be stolen.
Modern AI can create an almost complete digital clone of you.
What happens next?
It’s extremely frightening.
Scammers use your digital clone to apply for:
Online loans
Consumer financing
Credit cash-outs
They pass face and voice verification automatically.
Within just 30 minutes, they can use up the entire credit limit you are eligible for.
When bank notifications arrive, you realize your money hasn’t been stolen — instead, you are buried in debt, possibly in the hundreds of thousands or even millions.
Remember these 3 rules:
Never operate a stranger’s phone.
Do not touch, click, look at, or read anything aloud — even if they say “just one click.”
If you receive an unknown video call, disconnect immediately. Do not look at the camera or respond to requests to speak.
Please share this message with elders, children, and kind-hearted friends.
Scammers are now targeting good people.
Final reminder:
Never think:
“It won’t happen to me.”
“I’m smart enough not to fall for this.”
Scammers exploit confidence and kindness.
Please spread this message.
Share it at least once more.