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13, Feb, 2025
Can You Spot the Red Flags?
1️⃣ One of these profile pictures is AI-generated. How do you know?
(A) The lighting and background look too perfect, but the ears and hairline seem slightly off.
(B) It’s a slightly blurry group photo with natural lighting.
2️⃣ Which bio seems sketchy?
(A) “Investor | World Traveler | DM for collabs 📩” – no personal details.
(B) “Marketing professional. Love street food & trekking. Ask me about my dog 🐶”
3️⃣ You reverse-search their profile picture and find it in multiple places. What’s the red flag?
(A) The same image appears on multiple unrelated websites.
(B) It links to an old LinkedIn profile with the same name.
4️⃣ They DM you first. What’s suspicious?
(A) They shower you with compliments and push you to move to WhatsApp immediately.
(B) They comment on a post you shared last week before starting a convo.
5️⃣ Their posts look perfect—but should you dig deeper?
(A) Check their tagged photos and see if friends engage with them.
(B) Read their captions for detailed personal stories.
🚨 How Scammers Are Evolving
🔹 AI-Generated Faces – Some fake profiles use AI-created images that look real at first glance. 🔹 Fake Business Personas – Scammers pose as “successful entrepreneurs” or “crypto experts” to gain trust. 🔹 Minimal Digital Footprint – A lack of tagged photos, personal comments, or real-life interactions is a red flag.
💡 Final Tip: A real person has history, connections, and natural imperfections in their online presence. If something feels too good to be true, trust your instincts!