Joke Collection Website - Public benefit messages - What should parents do when teachers sneak into the parents' group during the school season to face online fraud?

What should parents do when teachers sneak into the parents' group during the school season to face online fraud?

In the opening season of the film, the scammer entered the QQ parents group, packaged himself as a teacher (including using the teacher's head and name), and sent a QR code to ask the parents to pay 1380. In the face of such fraud, parents should confirm the information in time and contact each other to avoid being deceived.

At the beginning of the school season, because the threshold of QQ platform is relatively low and there is no real-name authentication, other scammers choose to send fraudulent information when the teacher doesn't look at the mobile phone very much (such as during class breaks), which is difficult for the owner to find out in time. Let's talk about small fraud fees (pretending to be training fees, material fees, etc.). ) so that parents will not be overly vigilant. Coincidentally, online fraud has long been used by people, such as the common credit card application scam. Some people have poor credit records and it is difficult to apply through formal banking channels. Internet fraud is to use this to promote that they can provide credit cards without credit investigation, but in return, applicants need to pay a small amount of application fee, but the result is often that they still don't get credit cards after paying the application fee, and their application fee disappears. Similar are loan applications and false information. In the face of the situation of pretending to be a teacher to cheat money in the topic, when receiving such information from the teacher, you should check with the teacher repeatedly, contact the school by phone or face to face, and make a second confirmation with the school seriously, and confirm the teacher's identity and the actual payment amount and date before the transfer. Attention should also be paid when transferring money. Teachers generally ask parents to transfer information fees or training fees directly to the official corporate account of the school, which has nothing to do with the teacher himself. But what if parents find that the payee is a personal account when scanning the code for payment? This requires attention and timely check each other's identity information. In addition, teachers should not fill in personal information casually on the Internet, so as to avoid being impersonated, block the path of fraud by scammers from the root, and enhance people's awareness of personal prevention. Once you find yourself being impersonated, you should call the police in time and tell parents not to transfer money easily. Parents can also call the anti-fraud hotline 96 1 10 after discovering that they have been defrauded.