And the scary part?
Even smart, careful people fall for it.
Scammers know exactly how to talk, how to look official, and how to push your buttons.
Let’s take a closer look at how they do it.
You get a call: “This is Microsoft. We’ve detected a problem on your computer.”
They sound professional. They might even know your name. But here’s the truth: Microsoft isn’t calling you.
The goal? To get your login details or worse, remote access to your device.
Scammers love email.
“Your account has been locked. Click here to verify.”
“Your package is delayed. Track it here.”
“Reset your password now.”
The link looks official, but it leads to a fake login page built to steal your credentials.
Scammers don’t always steal, they sell.
A too-good-to-be-true digital course.
A fake tool or software license.
An online “deal” that vanishes the moment you pay.
They don’t want your trust forever. Just long enough to cash out.
Scammers don’t need coding skills; they rely on psychology.
Urgency: “Do this now or lose access.”
Authority: They pose as someone important (bank, tech support, company rep).
Familiarity: Sometimes they even impersonate people you know.
It’s not about being stupid it’s about being human.
Logins are powerful. One set of credentials can unlock:
Kajabi or Systeme.io → customer data, digital products, income streams
GoDaddy → domains, websites, and emails
Email accounts → the master key to reset every other account
Scammers don’t break in. They trick you into handing over the keys.
Stay alert. Question requests. And if something feels off it probably is.
© Created with systeme.io