Why Scammers Love Telegram
This aspect of the threat landscape deserves special attention because it's where many families get caught off guard.
According to federal data, this category of fraud has grown significantly year over year. The FBI's annual Internet Crime Report shows consistent increases in both the number of victims and total dollar losses, with adults over 60 bearing the heaviest per-capita losses.
What makes this particularly challenging for families is the evolving sophistication of the attacks. Where scammers once relied on mass-blast approaches with obvious errors, modern fraud uses targeted, personalized techniques that adapt to the victim's responses in real-time.
Key prevention strategies include:
- Maintaining open, judgment-free communication about online experiences
- Using technology that provides real-time protection without requiring constant vigilance
- Building habits (like the "verify before acting" rule) that become automatic over time
- Regular family check-ins that catch problems early
The goal isn't to make your parent afraid of the internet — it's to make them confident enough to use it safely.
Fake Investment Group Scams
This aspect of the threat landscape deserves special attention because it's where many families get caught off guard.
According to federal data, this category of fraud has grown significantly year over year. The FBI's annual Internet Crime Report shows consistent increases in both the number of victims and total dollar losses, with adults over 60 bearing the heaviest per-capita losses.
What makes this particularly challenging for families is the evolving sophistication of the attacks. Where scammers once relied on mass-blast approaches with obvious errors, modern fraud uses targeted, personalized techniques that adapt to the victim's responses in real-time.
Key prevention strategies include:
- Maintaining open, judgment-free communication about online experiences
- Using technology that provides real-time protection without requiring constant vigilance
- Building habits (like the "verify before acting" rule) that become automatic over time
- Regular family check-ins that catch problems early
The goal isn't to make your parent afraid of the internet — it's to make them confident enough to use it safely.
Impersonation Scams on Telegram
This aspect of the threat landscape deserves special attention because it's where many families get caught off guard.
According to federal data, this category of fraud has grown significantly year over year. The FBI's annual Internet Crime Report shows consistent increases in both the number of victims and total dollar losses, with adults over 60 bearing the heaviest per-capita losses.
What makes this particularly challenging for families is the evolving sophistication of the attacks. Where scammers once relied on mass-blast approaches with obvious errors, modern fraud uses targeted, personalized techniques that adapt to the victim's responses in real-time.
Key prevention strategies include:
- Maintaining open, judgment-free communication about online experiences
- Using technology that provides real-time protection without requiring constant vigilance
- Building habits (like the "verify before acting" rule) that become automatic over time
- Regular family check-ins that catch problems early
The goal isn't to make your parent afraid of the internet — it's to make them confident enough to use it safely.
Crypto Pump-and-Dump Groups
This aspect of the threat landscape deserves special attention because it's where many families get caught off guard.
According to federal data, this category of fraud has grown significantly year over year. The FBI's annual Internet Crime Report shows consistent increases in both the number of victims and total dollar losses, with adults over 60 bearing the heaviest per-capita losses.
What makes this particularly challenging for families is the evolving sophistication of the attacks. Where scammers once relied on mass-blast approaches with obvious errors, modern fraud uses targeted, personalized techniques that adapt to the victim's responses in real-time.
Key prevention strategies include:
- Maintaining open, judgment-free communication about online experiences
- Using technology that provides real-time protection without requiring constant vigilance
- Building habits (like the "verify before acting" rule) that become automatic over time
- Regular family check-ins that catch problems early
The goal isn't to make your parent afraid of the internet — it's to make them confident enough to use it safely.
Should Seniors Use Telegram at All?
This aspect of the threat landscape deserves special attention because it's where many families get caught off guard.
According to federal data, this category of fraud has grown significantly year over year. The FBI's annual Internet Crime Report shows consistent increases in both the number of victims and total dollar losses, with adults over 60 bearing the heaviest per-capita losses.
What makes this particularly challenging for families is the evolving sophistication of the attacks. Where scammers once relied on mass-blast approaches with obvious errors, modern fraud uses targeted, personalized techniques that adapt to the victim's responses in real-time.
Key prevention strategies include:
- Maintaining open, judgment-free communication about online experiences
- Using technology that provides real-time protection without requiring constant vigilance
- Building habits (like the "verify before acting" rule) that become automatic over time
- Regular family check-ins that catch problems early
The goal isn't to make your parent afraid of the internet — it's to make them confident enough to use it safely.
Safer Alternatives for Messaging
The best protection combines technology with education. Here's a practical approach:
Technology layer: Install GrannySafe on your parent's browser. It uses AI to analyze every webpage in real-time, catching scam sites, phishing pages, and fraudulent stores before they load. Many platform scams ultimately redirect victims to external websites — GrannySafe blocks these at the browser level.
Education layer: Have a calm, non-judgmental conversation about the specific scams on this platform. Use real examples — "Here's what a fake message looks like" is more effective than "Be careful online." Our guide on explaining online safety to grandparents has practical scripts you can use.
Communication layer: Establish a "call me first" rule — before your parent clicks any link, sends any money, or calls any number they received online, they call you. This simple habit prevents the majority of successful scams.
For more comprehensive protection strategies, explore our complete online safety checklist for seniors and our guide on how adult children can protect parents online.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the most common scam targeting seniors in 2026?
Tech support scams remain the most common by volume, but pig butchering (romance + crypto investment) scams cause the highest total losses. The FBI's 2025 report shows adults over 60 lost $3.4 billion across all scam types, with investment fraud and romance scams leading in dollar losses.
How can I protect my elderly parent from online scams?
The most effective approach combines three layers: technology (install GrannySafe and enable two-factor authentication), education (share specific examples of current scams), and communication (establish a "call me first" rule for any unexpected request involving money or personal information).
Is GrannySafe effective against this type of scam?
Yes. GrannySafe uses AI to analyze every webpage in real-time, detecting scam patterns including fake urgency, brand impersonation, phishing forms, and known scam domains. It blocks dangerous pages before they load and shows a clear warning. It's especially effective because many scams across platforms ultimately redirect victims to fraudulent websites — which is where GrannySafe intercepts them.
Where should I report an online scam?
File reports at the FBI's IC3 (ic3.gov) and the FTC (reportfraud.ftc.gov). Also report to the specific platform involved, your local police department, and the AARP Fraud Watch Network helpline (877-908-3360). Reporting helps law enforcement track patterns and may help with recovery.
Protect Your Parents Today
GrannySafe automatically detects scams before your loved ones fall victim. Install it in under 2 minutes — free for 7 days.
Install GrannySafe Free →