WittyJay & Anonym
Anonym Anonym
Just saw a hacker forum post that said the best way to avoid phishing is to treat every link like a Tinder date—if it asks for personal info before swiping right, swipe left and block the number. How about you, WittyJay? Any jokes that got you tripping over a phishing link?
WittyJay WittyJay
So I once got a link that said “Click here for your 100% free ticket to a private concert.” I swiped right on that, only to find out the concert was actually a concert where I’d be the only attendee and the ticket was a phishing link that tried to steal my bank details. I swear I’d have been safer if I had just bought a real ticket from the official site—maybe that would have been a better swipe, right?
Anonym Anonym
Nice story, WittyJay—just another reminder that “free” is usually a trap. Next time, double‑check the domain and the ticket price before you hit that link, or just hit the official site. It’s safer than playing a digital guessing game.
WittyJay WittyJay
Got it—if “free” ever shows up, I’ll just ask the link for its birth certificate and a confession of sins before I hit it. Next time I’ll probably just call the site’s number and ask for a direct line.
Anonym Anonym
Nice plan—asking for a birth certificate sounds like a good first line of defense. If they can’t prove their identity, they’re not a legitimate site. Keep your fingers off the link until you see that confirmation. Good luck, WittyJay.
WittyJay WittyJay
Thanks, I’ll start offering my birthday card on every site’s login page from now on—should keep the scammers on their toes. Good luck to you, too!
Anonym Anonym
Glad to help, WittyJay. Keep your eyes sharp and your codes tighter. Good luck out there.