Why Text Scams Are More Dangerous Than Email
Understanding the specific scam patterns on this platform is critical because each one exploits the platform's unique features and trust signals. The FBI's Internet Crime Complaint Center has seen reports related to this platform increase by over 60% in the past two years.
Here are the most common fraud patterns families need to watch for:
- Impersonation attacks: Scammers create fake profiles or accounts that mimic legitimate businesses, government agencies, or even family members. The visual similarity is often perfect — logos, formatting, even profile history can be faked.
- Urgency-based manipulation: Messages claim your account will be closed, a payment is overdue, or a loved one is in danger. The time pressure prevents victims from thinking critically.
- Link-based phishing: Shortened URLs, QR codes, or "click here to verify" links redirect to convincing fake login pages that harvest credentials.
- Payment redirection: Scammers intercept real transactions or create fake invoices, redirecting payments to accounts they control.
- Emotional exploitation: Romance, fear, greed, and compassion are all weaponized depending on the platform and the victim's vulnerability profile.
Each of these patterns has evolved significantly with AI tools, making them harder to detect than ever before. Let's look at each one in detail.
The 6 Most Common Smishing Scams
Understanding the specific scam patterns on this platform is critical because each one exploits the platform's unique features and trust signals. The FBI's Internet Crime Complaint Center has seen reports related to this platform increase by over 60% in the past two years.
Here are the most common fraud patterns families need to watch for:
- Impersonation attacks: Scammers create fake profiles or accounts that mimic legitimate businesses, government agencies, or even family members. The visual similarity is often perfect — logos, formatting, even profile history can be faked.
- Urgency-based manipulation: Messages claim your account will be closed, a payment is overdue, or a loved one is in danger. The time pressure prevents victims from thinking critically.
- Link-based phishing: Shortened URLs, QR codes, or "click here to verify" links redirect to convincing fake login pages that harvest credentials.
- Payment redirection: Scammers intercept real transactions or create fake invoices, redirecting payments to accounts they control.
- Emotional exploitation: Romance, fear, greed, and compassion are all weaponized depending on the platform and the victim's vulnerability profile.
Each of these patterns has evolved significantly with AI tools, making them harder to detect than ever before. Let's look at each one in detail.
Why Seniors Are More Likely to Click
Seniors interact with this platform differently than younger users — and those differences create vulnerability. Research from the AARP shows that adults over 60 are significantly less likely to verify suspicious messages through a separate channel and more likely to trust official-looking communications at face value.
Several factors increase risk for elderly users specifically:
- Trust in technology: Seniors who learned to use the platform from a family member often assume it has built-in safety measures that would prevent scams from reaching them. This creates a false sense of security.
- Social isolation: Elderly users who rely on the platform for social connection are more likely to engage with strangers and less likely to question unusual requests.
- Unfamiliarity with platform norms: Not knowing what "normal" looks like on a platform makes it harder to spot what's abnormal.
- Reluctance to ask for help: Many seniors feel embarrassed to ask a family member whether something is a scam, so they make decisions alone.
- Financial patterns: Retirees with savings but limited income are high-value targets who can be convinced to make large one-time payments.
None of this is a character flaw — it's the natural result of a generation adapting to technology that was designed for a different demographic. Understanding these patterns helps families provide targeted protection without condescension.
How to Block Scam Texts on iPhone and Android
Protection requires both settings changes and behavioral guidelines. Here's what to do:
Platform settings to change immediately:
- Enable two-factor authentication (2FA) — this prevents account takeover even if the password is compromised
- Set the account to maximum privacy — limit who can contact your parent, see their profile, and find them through search
- Disable automatic link previews where possible — this prevents malicious links from loading content
- Turn on login notifications — your parent (or you) will receive an alert if someone logs into the account from an unfamiliar device
- Review connected apps and revoke access for anything unfamiliar
Behavioral rules that prevent most scams:
- Never click links in messages from unknown senders — go directly to the official website instead
- Never send money to someone you've only met online — regardless of the reason or urgency
- Verify any unusual request through a separate channel — if "Amazon" emails about a charge, call Amazon directly using the number on their website
- When in doubt, call a family member before taking action
Additionally, install GrannySafe on their browser — it catches scam websites that platform protections miss, blocking phishing pages and fake stores before they can cause harm.
Teaching the "Never Click Links in Texts" Rule
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.
How GrannySafe Catches Smishing Landing Pages
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.
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