What the Tech: Warning signs that your child may be a victim of sextortion
Every parent needs to know these warning signs that their child may be a victim of sextortion.
Every parent needs to know these warning signs that their child may be a victim of sextortion.
Sextortion victims are getting younger every year. Is your child in danger of becoming a victim?
Learn more about Safer Internet Day, which is Tuesday, February 11, 2025, to keep you and your family safer.
Think you’re too smart to fall for a romance scam? They are getting more sophisticated and are costing victims more than $1 billion a year.
Instagram is increasing efforts to stop sextortion. But how?
Here are ways parents can get help if their child is a victim of online sextortion scams.
Social media companies are working with the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children to use an online tool called “Take It Down” to help sextortion victims.
Sextortion cases are on the rise and the FBI warns parents that reported incidents are spiking dramatically and targeting 14-17-year-old boys.
The FBI is warning teenagers and their parents that scammers are targeting young boys by posing as girls and offering to exchange nude photos.
Many email scams appear to target senior citizens but one scam that’s currently making the rounds again is having success duping younger adults out of their money. The sextortion email appears to have been sent from the victim’s email account. For instance, if your email address is “myemail@email.com”, the scam email appears to have been sent from that address. The…