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.
Ask episode
AI Snips
Chapters
Transcript
Episode notes
ADVICE

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.
ANECDOTE

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.
ADVICE

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.
Get the Snipd Podcast app to discover more snips from this episode
Get the app