Red envelope rebate, induced recharge ... criminals stare at the online lesson platform, using QQ, WeChat, etc. to beware of students' fraud! Children who have completed online classes may be giving money to scammers

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Recently, criminals have designed fraud traps in the course of students' online courses, using students to guard against weak consciousness and implement fraud such as slipping orders and rebates. Police said that it is important to combat such frauds after the fact, but more importantly, to strengthen publicity and prevention beforehand, and work together at home and school to eliminate the fraud in its infancy.

On March 7, Zhang Ling (pseudonym) took her 10-year-old son to the Donghu police station in Luohu District, Shenzhen, and reported that her son had been cheated by 4,000 yuan to play games on his mobile phone.

"When I used a mobile phone to play a game, the system automatically matched the game teammates. One of the teammates said that he was the game anchor and asked me to add him as a QQ friend." Ms. Zhang said that through QQ communication, the teammate said that there were 100 Students give away game skins and promise to return 3,000 yuan as long as they transfer 1,000 yuan during the event. However, after turning 4,000 yuan, Ms. Zhang's son was hacked by the other party.

During the epidemic prevention and control period, many schools used online live lessons to teach students, and the children increased their contact with their mobile phones with "justification". The reporter learned that recently, many criminals across the country have used QQ, WeChat, and other channels to use the online lesson platform as a "stage" for implementing new types of frauds and fraud cases against school students.

In the online class, "swipe the bill" was cheated 190,000 yuan

On February 25th, in the course of 14-year-old Orange Orange (pseudonym) in Huiyang District, Huizhou City, Guangdong Province, using her mother's mobile phone to take an online lesson, she suddenly received a message from a QQ group named "A birthday benefit group for some Internet celebrities." Open the QQ group information, Orange Orange saw the other party said, "A certain online celebrity has a birthday, and the existing benefits are distributed to everyone! A small amount of large rewards to make money, I can scan the code in a simple way, the quota is limited, first come first Go! "

"He asked me to scan the QR code with my parents' mobile phone, not only to get the principal back immediately, but also to get a commission." Orange Orange immediately added the other party as a friend, and operated according to the other party's requirements. Commissions and commissions.

"Continue to pay the order, the commission is higher, and pay you one time after you finish it." After feeling the sweetness, Orange Orange trusted the other party more and continued to pay the bill. However, after the other party used the excuse of two-dimensional code abnormality, audit fees, virtual orders and other excuses, repeatedly asked Orange Orange to re-scan the new two-dimensional code to transfer money, resulting in Orange Orange being deceived by 190,000 yuan.

Similar to Orange Orange, the 11-year-old student Xiaojun (pseudonym) did not return his mobile phone to his parents in time after taking the online class. In the list she recommended on QQ, she found that a netizen wrote “Platform signed a media company sponsorship, there is a rebate activity”. Therefore, Xiaojun took the initiative to add the other party's QQ as a friend. The other party said, "As long as you click on the link to sign a contract with a platform, there will be media company sponsorship and get rebates." Xiaojun operated according to the other party's instructions and was defrauded of more than 30,000 yuan. .

The reporter learned from the Procuratorate of Huiyang District that recently there have been a number of online fraud cases against elementary and middle school students who have taken online courses at home, causing the parents of students to lose more than 270,000 yuan. At present, the district procuratorate has intervened in these cases in advance, guided the public security organs to investigate and obtain evidence, and issued procuratorial recommendations to the district education bureau.

"When criminals implement" slip order, rebate fraud ", they usually follow the three steps of obtaining trust, setting bait, and implementing fraud." Through the above-mentioned case, the staff of the procuratorate found that the fraudsters first returned the shopping principal and Paying commissions to earn your child's trust, and then tricking your child into completing the ordering task multiple times in a row to return the commission and principal in one go. After completing the tasks, they continued to induce the children to send money to the fraudulent account under the guise of system failure, transfer delays, and account freezes, etc. After the funds were received, the children were blackened to complete the fraud. .

Sixth grade students reward the anchor for 120,000 yuan in a week

The child secretly gave the anchor a reward of 120,000 yuan to play the mobile phone under the name of Internet class?

On February 26, Ms. Liang, who lives in Baoan District, Shenzhen, reported that her husband's bank card balance suddenly dropped by more than 100,000 yuan, but she could not find the debit record and did not receive a text message notification from the bank.

After receiving the report, the Shenzhen police investigation revealed that Ms. Liang's son was 12 years old and was in sixth grade of elementary school. Due to the epidemic situation, he took a mobile phone online at home every day. While her parents were sleeping, Ms. Liang's son stole his father's mobile phone to recharge his game account and live broadcast account, cleared all transfer records, and then kept gifting the game anchor on the platform.

Ms. Liang asked only to find out that her son gave about 120,000 yuan to the game anchor on a certain network platform within a week. "When the child was induced in the game, he desperately recharged and gave gifts. In less than two hours a night, he even recharged more than 70,000 yuan, and then kept gifting the game anchor, and the gift was only 1598 yuan. 71. "Ms. Liang took her husband's mobile phone and opened the bank app to check the bank card bill.

The reporter learned that after the incident, Ms. Liang has put down her work, concentrated on collecting evidence, and communicated with the platform to handle the matter. It is understood that currently the platform has refunded Ms. Liang.

"Usually, in webcasts, anchors such as singing anchors and game anchors will interact with the audience on the live broadcast platform. Many minors will brush gifts with the wind, and vanity strongmen will embark on the road of crime in order to support their face." Shenzhen police introduced that such scams are targeted at minors recently. On the one hand, minors need to use mobile phones to take online lessons during the epidemic, so it is easy for scammers to get started; on the other hand, because minors lack certain precautions Consciousness, easy to trust the words of others, thus being induced into a trap step by step.

Cyber ​​police act as "teacher" to take live safety lesson

"Recent cyber fraud warnings against minors have shown a clear upward trend in recent years. Criminals are using students' online classes to design a variety of fraud traps and use students to guard against weak consciousness to carry out fraud. Of course, it is important to combat after the fact, but more important is publicity Prevention, will wipe out the buds in the bud state. "He Peizhu, a policeman from the Shenzhen Police Force's Luohu Branch, said.

The reporter learned that on the basis of sorting out and analyzing the reports of network fraud reports in the recent stage, the Shenzhen Police Public Security Bureau Luohu Branch Cyber ​​Police Brigade united the Public Relations Office and relied on Tencent Cloud Class to launch a live broadcast class for students' cyber security prevention to primary and secondary students Promote cybersecurity prevention knowledge.

On March 20th, taking the Liannan Primary School in Luohu District as the first pilot, the Police School's online live broadcast class was officially launched. He Peizhu started broadcasting in the office as a lecturer, and more than 2,000 students and parents of Liannan Primary School watched it at home. The live broadcast of this lecture focuses on fraud methods such as online game recharge scams, red envelope rebate scams, and reward traps that have been sent to primary school students in Shenzhen since February this year.

In the 45-minute class, "part-time teacher" He Peizhu combined with typical cases to let students understand that if there is a "pie" in the sky, there are often traps at their feet. Through online practice, students will learn what to do once they encounter online fraud. Try to recover the losses; through the "more self-discipline, the more free" experiential intensive exercises, let students strengthen time management and improve self-control.

In response to online class fraud, Shenzhen Public Security reminded parents to take good measures for their mobile payment security, and not to easily inform their children of important information such as mobile payment passwords and bank payment passwords; at the same time, they must interact with their children to cultivate their self-control Don't let children indulge in virtual worlds such as mobile games and live webcasts; in addition, they must cultivate children's awareness of online risks, and be careful in making friends online, and don't easily trust strangers.

Liu Youting