Instagram, Facebook, Twitter and Reddit are the most popular social media sites today with a combined user base of billions of people. Your public social media profiles are the easiest ways scammers and hackers collect your personal detail and slowly build a profile of who you are. You may not realize it, but any personal information you share online could be used against you by scammers.
Whether you know it or not, putting your personal information online endangers you, your co-workers, neighbors and family. They can be targeted by scammers, hackers, and home robbers. Be very careful about where and with whom you share the below information.
Any documents that identify you are not for public consumption. This is the kind of information that helps scammers/hackers steal your identity or target you with a tailor-made scam.
Social engineering tactics use your name, date of birth and location to create a profile of who you are even if there is no photo of you. This information is useful to identity thieves and scammers to know who they are dealing with and how to swindle you.
Your credit card number, bank account information and available balance shouldn’t be shared recklessly. The payments you make can reveal to scammers your financial information. Keep that to yourself.
Your login usernames and passwords are just that, yours. They are not public information and shouldn’t be shared even with friends and family. Additionally, PINs and One Time Passwords (OTPs) are never to be shared with others under any circumstance. Doing so can give strangers access to your accounts and even enable them to withdraw or transfer money from your bank accounts.
Your address and phone number should be strongly guarded when you are online. Scammers can misuse your information for their many aliases to scam people while their details point to you.
Active location data is the one you post or share by yourself, indicating where you are or wish to go. Passive location data is collected by your apps in the background as long as you allow that setting/or turn location ON.
Avoid using the social apps as much as possible. Instead, use your browser to access the socials. Or, change the app settings/permissions to prevent location data from being collected and sent.
The streets and means you use to get to work and back home shouldn’t be aired on social media. This way, anyone who may want to track you down doesn’t just get that information easily and for free. The same goes for clubs and places that you hangout often like coffee shops.
Let your work issues with fellow employees and your boss be restricted to channels like work emails and calls. Do not go posting them on the socials whether in good or bad light.
Avoid criticizing your current workplace or any other place you worked. It is unprofessional behavior that tarnishes your work colleagues’ reputation and can ruin your employment prospects with other companies.
Whenever you leave a closed-door meeting in which information exchanged is not for the public, it is just a clever move to keep it to yourself. Avoid boasting online about how privileged you are to know what is kept from the public. You make yourself a target for anyone needing that information.
A chilling story on the news about a couple who pranked their kids, recorded the video, then uploaded it on YouTube is our cautionary tale here. The parent got carried away in their prank and ended up losing custody of 2 children.
A common fad today is making TikTok videos. Some people make videos of themselves drinking and driving, which is a traffic offence in almost every country in the world. It is also funny that some employees who called in sick post photos of themselves partying that same day on social media. As soon as your employer finds this out, you may be out of a job!
You may want to keep from bragging online about the exotic holiday destinations you plan to visit. This is because you let everyone who knows where you live that you will not be at home. Burglars have an easy time cleaning out your place when they have this information.
Be careful on public Wi-Fi in cafes and libraries. Avoid doing your credit card purchases, wire transfers and other financial transactions on public internet spaces. These may have vulnerabilities that expose your data to hackers.
Whenever you sell or give away your computer, phone or tablet, make sure you remove any data that can be used against you like your emails, phone personal contacts, work and banking information and documents.
When transacting money from any of your devices, make sure you are only transacting with people or organizations that you trust.
Have you fallen for a hoax, bought a fake product? Report the site and warn others!
As the influence of the internet rises, so does the prevalence of online scams. There are fraudsters making all kinds of claims to trap victims online - from fake investment opportunities to online stores - and the internet allows them to operate from any part of the world with anonymity. The ability to spot online scams is an important skill to have as the virtual world is increasingly becoming a part of every facet of our lives. The below tips will help you identify the signs which can indicate that a website could be a scam. Common Sense: Too Good To Be True When looking for goods online, a great deal can be very enticing. A Gucci bag or a new iPhone for half the price? Who wouldn’t want to grab such a deal? Scammers know this too and try to take advantage of the fact. If an online deal looks too good to be true, think twice and double-check things. The easiest way to do this is to simply check out the same product at competing websites (that you trust). If the difference in prices is huge, it might be better to double-check the rest of the website. Check Out the Social Media Links Social media is a core part of ecommerce businesses these days and consumers often expect online shops to have a social media presence. Scammers know this and often insert logos of social media sites on their websites. Scratching beneath the surface often reveals this fu
How do I recover my crypto after it’s stolen? What happens if your crypto wallet is compromised? Can stolen crypto be traced, and can police actually recover crypto in 2026? These are the questions most people ask within minutes of realizing their wallet has been drained. Crypto theft is fast, quiet, and unforgiving. By the time most victims notice something is wrong, the funds are already moving across the blockchain. Once seen as a problem for exchanges and whales, crypto theft now heavily affects everyday investors. Phishing links, fake support chats, wallet approval scams, SIM swaps, and malware attacks have become common. Knowing what recovery realistically looks like—and what it doesn’t—can prevent panic, bad decisions, and costly follow-up scams. In a Nutshell Crypto recovery is possible, but only in limited situations Blockchain transactions are irreversible, but stolen crypto can still be traced Speed and documentation matter more than optimism Police and exchanges play a bigger role than private recovery services Guaranteed recovery offers are almost always scams Is it Actually Possible to Recover Stolen Crypto? Yes, crypto recovery is possible, but only under specific conditions and rarely through direct action by the victim. Blockchain transactions are final by design. Once crypto is sent and confirmed, it cannot be reversed. There is no central authority, no chargeback process, and no technical “undo” button, even if the transaction was clearly fraudulent. This is where many people ask whether stolen crypto can be traced. In most cases, it can. Every transaction