God
Will Help Us For 9ja! Many users of Facebook will agree that they have,
at one time or another, received phoney messages from strange but
attractive looking ladies on the .social networking site.
Pretending
to be young ladies aged between 18 and 26 years, the criminals often
target men that are naturally drawn to pretty women. Investigation shows
that they always use freshly opened Facebook accounts – the types that
display one or two sensual pictures of a woman and very few ‘friends’ –
to bait their victims.
Having
successfully ‘wooed’ their unsuspecting victim, they tactically send
short messages that begin with phrases, such as, ‘How are you?’ and ‘Can
I be your friend?’As soon as they receive a response, they move on to the next stage, flirting with the victim before going on to squeeze as much money as they can get from him.
It
is not difficult to spot these fake ‘girls’ on Facebook by simply
observing certain similarities in their personal data. For instance,
their names are as unreal as their pictures look.
Imagine
receiving a messages from a certain Franklin Ariel Cortez Garcia who
begins his love note by writing, “Hello, my name is Precious. Please
reply me so I can send my pictures to you through my email address,
mypreciousbabygal@yahoo.com.”
Although Facebook tries to eliminate such fraudulent messages by marking them as spam shortly after they have reached their victims, some hapless persons may fall prey before such cleansing takes place.
It
is important to note that beyond the tricks, the simple explanation is
that they are ‘419’ men luring people into parting with their
hard-earned cash by operating fake Facebook accounts.
While
the trend isn’t peculiar to Nigeria, a US-based Facebook group called
Stop Nigerian 419 scams (Stomp out Scams)has been created to help
everyone “become aware of, recognize and avoid falling victim to all
types of Nigerian style scams, including romance, advance payment and
foreign lottery scams.”
The
good news is that Nigerians can avoid falling victim to these con men
by taking certain precautionary measures, such as activating the privacy
setting on their Facebook accounts and treating subsequent requests for
friendship, especially from persons they hardly know, with suspicion.
The
subject has been trending on social media with some victims of the
scams recounting their experiences. Lamenting the ugly trend, @LODAFRIQ
wrote, “I receive an average of two scam messages of this type daily on
Facebook. #fraudsters #yahooyahoo #ole #419 .
A
certain Lorliam Shija says, “Lilia Princess Edson, Rosemary Ndadaye
,Angela Mpka..are the three 419 people that sent me seductive messages
last week.” Also, Ben Ezemalu wrote, “All these ‘girls’ sending me
Facebook messages with e-mail addresses think I have never see a pretty
girl!”
Then
@imuss added a note of warning, “Only 10 per cent of boys are talking
with girls on Facebook. The remaining 90 per cent are talking with fake
accounts”.
Source: PunchNews
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