
Hacking Humans Cold weather, hot scams.
Jan 29, 2026
Scammers exploit a Verizon outage to push fake credits and phish credentials. A rare big-money recovery story follows a woman who lost nearly $1 million to tech-support fraud. Fraudsters prey on Ozempic and GLP-1 demand with counterfeit pharmacies and deepfake ads. Winter brings utility impersonation scams using urgent shutoff threats and unusual payment requests.
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Verify Outage Credit Messages
- If you get texts or emails claiming Verizon will credit you after an outage, don't click links or enter credentials.
- Visit Verizon's official site or contact support directly to confirm any credit offers.
Elderly Victim Loses Then Recovers Life Savings
- Jeanette Voss was scammed out of $950,000 after a fake Microsoft tech support call and fake crypto wallets.
- The Secret Service later recovered funds and returned about $1.033 million, changing her life.
Ignore The Siren—Use MFA Instead
- Don't trust dramatic on-screen warnings claiming your computer is hacked; close the tab and verify separately.
- Use multi-factor authentication (hardware keys if possible) to protect accounts from credential theft.
