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Scam Alert: OR woman has a warning for social media users

By HALEY RUSH

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    WASHINGTON COUNTY, Oregon (KPTV) — A Washington County woman has a warning for social media users, after she said hackers took over her Instagram account, causing many of her followers to lose hundreds of dollars.

ā€œIā€™m pretty sad, actually,ā€ said Roussy Tello Ramirez.

Ramirez is talking about a video she recorded that encouraged her Instagram followers to invest in cryptocurrency. She told FOX 12 she willingly recorded the video, after she received a similar one from a friend through Instagram.

ā€œAnd she said you should try it; you should try investing,ā€ said Ramirez. ā€œBut before you do, send me a video saying this confirmation that way we can send you $500 and then from there on you can just invest to get the $10,000.ā€

After Ramirez recorded the video, her friend asked for some information to complete the transaction, like her phone number and the email she uses for Instagram.

ā€œAnd I said youā€™re not gonna hack me are you, and she said I wouldnā€™t do anything to hurt you,ā€ said Ramirez. ā€œThat was the last message I received.ā€

ā€œI started getting Instagram vibration, like warning, warning, somebody is trying to get into your Instagram in Nigeria,ā€ said Ramirez. ā€œAnd I kept pressing that that wasnā€™t me, and unfortunately, by the time I just kept pressing it, my Instagram just kicked me out,ā€ she continued.

Ramirez said her followers then started receiving the video she recorded.

ā€œUnfortunately, I do have over a thousand friends on Instagram, and most of them believed that it was real,ā€ she said.

Ramirez said her followers are now keeping the scam going, by creating their own videos.

To make matters worse, she said a lot of her friends also lost hundreds of dollars each.

ā€œI keep receiving messages that they want to get into my Cash App and they want access to my phone, but they canā€™t,ā€ Ramirez said. ā€œThe good thing that, what I did is, the email that I had put in there, I no longer use it.ā€

ā€œItā€™s an old email and nothing is linked to my bank account,ā€ she continued.

ā€œHackers, they understand that an emotional connection that you might have with someone will trigger you to act,ā€ said Wu-chang Feng, a computer science professor at Portland State University.

Feng isnā€™t surprised by this scam, or that people are falling for it.

ā€œSocial media is such that you do want to connect seamlessly and frictionlessly with your friend and the whole point of that, is not to have to pick up a phone to pick up a phone to verify,ā€ said Feng. ā€œSo, you just take it at face value.ā€

ā€œMost of us would, and thatā€™s where the real danger is,ā€ continued Feng.

Feng said always confirm with a friend outside of social media, and if you can, set up two-factor authentication with every account you use. He said thatā€™s because even with just an email or phone number today, scammers can hack into all kinds of sites.

ā€œI kind of got pretty sad after I realized not necessarily that they affected me, but it affected other people and financially,ā€ said Ramirez.

The hackers are still posting as Ramirez, even saying she bought a new car with her $10,000.

Feng said thatā€™s a whole other issue, how long it can take to get a hacked account back on some of these social media sites.

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Article Topic Follows: CNN - Regional

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