+ Axiom2001 Posted Friday at 10:40 PM Posted Friday at 10:40 PM Last week I was scammed big time while I was doing some banking via the net. ...had my bank accounts and associated credit cards changed. On Saturday I went to Best Buy and purchased an Android, for I am a neophyte when it comes to cell phones. Today I rang American Express to ask about my card, for it was one of the initial ones that was hacked. Unfortunately, I used my newly unprotected Android. The voice asked for my number on the card; I rendered it. The voice stated that it did not recognize the card and wanted my COMPLETE SS# which I know is definitely a NO, NO! I hung up, for my Gold card was compromised along with other cards which I'd cancelled and requested a replacement. When I rung my sister a few minutes ago and discussed the aforementioned with her, my new cell went a little crazy. That gave me the thought that I'd been hacked via the new telephone number that the scammer had received from my AMEX conversation. Should I purchase a new phone and have the technician or seller put in some apps for protection? I know this is the beginning of an acute holiday time period, for when I made an appointment at the APPLE Store to change things in my email addressed that had been hacked--the mall was full of folks by 10:00 A.M. It was a little daunting. Well, guys, please be kind; I cannot afford an expensive cell phone but think about keeping my current one and getting support as I stated in the above: get that phone proofed by the man who sold it to me or by another techie in his department. Advice is wanted! 56harrisond, marylander1940, + JamesB and 1 other 1 3
+ MikeThomas Posted Friday at 11:09 PM Posted Friday at 11:09 PM Sorry, but I really don’t understand what happened to you. + Pensant, Nightowl, 56harrisond and 1 other 4
hungry4darkmeat Posted Friday at 11:13 PM Posted Friday at 11:13 PM First turn off your phone. Restart it in safe mode - you may need to wipe it and restore it from the cloud but first you need to change your passwords- so switch to a different device and reset all your passwords on email accounts and all financial apps credit cards and other sensitive apps if you change your passwords on a different device you should be able to take a breath. next - Get lifelock immediately. then either get a malware removal app or wipe it and restore your data minus the malware MikeBiDude 1
maninsoma Posted yesterday at 12:33 AM Posted yesterday at 12:33 AM 1 hour ago, MikeThomas said: Sorry, but I really don’t understand what happened to you. I also don't understand it. A brand new phone purchased from Best Buy wouldn't be compromised. I wouldn't waste money on LifeLock. You can just contact the credit reporting bureaus and put a lock on your credit. The only problem is having to remember to unlock if you decide to apply for a new card/loan. hungry4darkmeat, Lotus-eater and Nue2thegame 1 2
MaybeMaybeNot Posted yesterday at 04:55 AM Posted yesterday at 04:55 AM It wouldn't hurt to run this through chatgpt to get advice. I can't imagine how your new phone got hacked. Also, I would definitely go to where you purchased it and tell them what happened. It is possible when you came AmEx, you Googled and got a number which was really a scam number? Did you call the number on the back of your card? hungry4darkmeat and Lotus-eater 1 1
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