Tag: Online Scams

  • The “Unsubscribe” Trap:

    When Cleaning Your Inbox Invites More Spam

    We have all felt that surge of satisfaction when clearing out a cluttered email inbox. You scroll to the bottom of an annoying, unwanted message, find the microscopic word “Unsubscribe,” click it, and breathe a sigh of relief. Job done, right?

    Not always. In fact, cybersecurity experts warn that clicking “unsubscribe” on the wrong type of email can act as a beacon, signaling to scammers that they have found a live, active target.

    To keep your inbox quiet and your data safe, you need to know when to click—and when to hit the panic button instead.

    🛑 The Trap: Why Scammers Love “Unsubscribe” Links

    To understand the trap, you have to look at who sent the email. Email senders generally fall into two distinct camps:

    Camp A: Legitimate Companies (Safe to Unsubscribe)

    If the email is from a brand you know and have actually bought things from in the past (like a local supermarket, a clothing brand, or a mainstream news site), clicking unsubscribe is completely safe. By law, these companies must honor your request and remove you from their list.

    Camp B: Unknown Scammers (The Trap)

    If you receive a random email out of the blue from a sender you don’t recognize—perhaps claiming you won a lottery, or offering random medical cures—the rules completely change.

    To a scammer, an “unsubscribe” link is a trick. When you click it, you aren’t removing yourself from a list. Instead, you are sending a digital notification straight back to the hacker that says: “This email address is real, a human being is actively reading it, and they are willing to click on links.”

    Once your email is marked as “live,” the scammers will package your address up and sell it to other spam networks. Far from cleaning your inbox, that single click can cause an avalanche of fresh junk mail.

    🛡️ The 2 Safest Ways to Clean Your Inbox

    Instead of blindly clicking links inside the body of a suspicious email, use these two much safer strategies:

    1. Use the “Email Client” Master Switch (Safest)

    Major email providers like Gmail and Outlook have built-in safety features to handle this. If they recognize a legitimate mailing list, they will automatically place their own official “Unsubscribe” button at the very top of the email, right next to the sender’s name.

    Always look for the button there instead of scrolling to the bottom of the message. Clicking the provider’s built-in button sends a clean, automated request backstage without ever forcing you to visit a scammer’s potentially dangerous website.

    2. The “Mark as Spam” Burn Policy

    If you don’t recognize the company and there is no native unsubscribe button at the top, do not click anything inside the email. Simply select the message and click the “Mark as Spam” or “Report Junk” icon (usually a small exclamation mark or trash can icon at the top of your app). This does two great things:

    • It instantly throws the message into the digital bin.
    • It trains your email’s filter to automatically block that sender—and similar messages—from ever bothering you again.
  • How to Spot a Fake “Delivery” Text in 3 Seconds

    Aliens Shopping Online

    We have all been there: your phone buzzes, and you see a text message claiming a parcel from Royal Mail, DPD, or Amazon couldn’t be delivered. It usually asks you to click a link to pay a small “redelivery fee” or update your address.

    When you are genuinely expecting a package, it is incredibly easy to accidentally click without thinking.

    Scammers rely on that exact split-second of hesitation. But you don’t need to be a cybersecurity expert to protect yourself. Next time a delivery text pops up on your screen, run this simple 3-second check to instantly spot a fake.

    ⏳ Second 1: Look at the Sender’s Number

    Real delivery companies invest millions in their communication systems. When Royal Mail or DPD texts you, the sender’s name will almost always show up at the top as text (e.g., “RoyalMail” or “DPD”), rather than a random, eleven-digit mobile number.

    • The Red Flag: If the text claims to be an official alert from a massive global corporation but is sent from a standard, personal mobile phone number (like 07XXX XXXXXX), it is a fake. Delete it immediately.

    ⏳ Second 2: Inspect the “Weird” Web Address

    Before you ever dream of tapping a link in a text message, look closely at the spelling of the website address they want you to visit.

    Scammers try to mimic real names, but they can’t buy official company domains. Instead, they use slight misspellings or completely random letters.

    • Real: royalmail.com/track-your-item
    • Fake: royal-mail-redelivery-hub.com or dpd-parcel-update.net

    Rule of Thumb: If the link looks long, messy, or has hyphens breaking up the company name, it is a trap designed to steal your bank details.

    ⏳ Second 3: Smell the “False Urgency”

    Scammers are emotional hackers. They want to scare you into acting before your logic kicks in. They will use phrases like:

    • “Your item will be returned to sender in 24 hours.”
    • “Action required immediately to avoid a fee.”

    Real delivery companies don’t threaten you. If they can’t deliver a package, they will either leave a physical red card through your letterbox or hold the item safely at the local depot for days without making demands. If a text makes your heart race, step back—it’s likely a scam.

    🛡️ The Golden Rule of Deliveries

    If you are ever genuinely worried that you missed a real parcel, never click the link in the text message. Instead, open your internet browser, go directly to the official website of the company yourself, and type your tracking number straight into their official search bar. If the text was real, the details will be right there. If it was a scam, the website will tell you the number doesn’t exist.