Home crime The grandparent scam: Cybercriminals target the elderly

The grandparent scam: Cybercriminals target the elderly

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Cybercrime has multiple niches and approaches, but perhaps the worst is the targeting of older people and taking advantage of their vulnerability. Here is what you need to know and what to look out for.

CYBERCRIME has multiple niches and approaches, but perhaps the worst is the targeting of older people and taking advantage of their vulnerability. Across the Northern Cape many of our elderly people have fallen victim to this type of crime. Here is what you need to know and what to look out for.

The grandparent scam. Phishing. Online fraud. Financial exploitation. These are just some of the attacks that are directed at older people, not just in our Province, but across the world.

And these attacks are proving to be unpleasantly successful. A team of researchers found that lonely older adults are more vulnerable to scams, particularly phishing e-mails, investment schemes and the grandparent scam – the fake call about a grandchild needing financial help urgently.

This concern is reflected in a study which found that older people are conned out of billions of rand across the world every year.

Anna Collard, SVP Content Strategy and Evangelist at KnowBe4 Africa, pointed out, the risk remains high for people who are isolated, don’t spend a lot of time with digital technologies, and who are at risk purely due to their age.

“Research has found that older people are more vulnerable to scams because with age we lose the ability to detect manipulation from genuine communication,” Collard said. “There have been numerous studies that have pointed to how cognitive impairments in older people open the door to cybercriminals who take advantage of these gaps and these people.”

A paper written by Matthew Grilli, a professor in the College of Science- Psychology at the University of Arizona, and colleagues found that “older age was related to worse discrimination between genuine and phishing emails”. All this points to a concerning issue – older people need better protection from cybercrime and more insight into the warning signs that could indicate they are being defrauded.

“Cognitive issues that come hand in hand with ageing or perhaps an illness such as Alzheimer’s, will change how a person perceives social engineering,” Collard said. “This is why the fraudulent message, call or email that pretends to be from a struggling grandchild is so popular and successful. Older people may not notice the shifty e-mail address or dodgy phone number, or they may assume that their grandchild has simply changed their email or phone number. They then respond to the request and lose their money.”

The situation has been somewhat worsened by the Covid-19 pandemic. Many people have been isolated or on their own for a long time, and this in itself can impact how a person thinks and reacts.

Unfortunately, this is precisely what criminals take advantage of. While loneliness and isolation are not exclusive to older people in terms of their impact, they do play a role in increasing the vulnerability of older people.

“Scammers are polite, charming and friendly, that’s how they get your attention and win your trust,” Collard said. “It is this warmth and kindness that lures people in. Anyone hearing someone being overly nice will be wary of their intentions, whereas someone isolated and lonely may appreciate it and fall prey to the scam.”

It is important today to help older people recognise these scams with consistent education and awareness. Show them how intelligent scammers are and the vast size of the industry – there are call centres dedicated to calling people just to scam them, it’s not just older people at risk. Everyone is. The challenge is to help people recognise the risk and to bypass it effectively.

“The cybercriminals have key performance indicators, targets to meet, quotas to fill,” concludes Collard. “They are out there trying to make money and catch people unawares and they don’t care who makes the mistake that gets them what they want.

“Their job is to build a rapport and charm or use fear to gain access to accounts, whether these are on the phone or online. They will likely have some information about you – address, phone number – and will use this information to gain trust. A great example is the scam call pretending to be from your bank about verifying a suspicious transaction. To avoid falling into these traps, people need to be suspicious by default.”

The tricks used, the cons made, the approaches chosen – these affect people of all ages and are very easy to fall for. What everyone needs now, regardless of age, is to remember that the con is always on and to interrogate every transaction and request.

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