00:00While millions of people sleep through the night, somewhere in the world, a message is quietly written.
00:06This morning, I received one of those messages, an email claiming to be from a Nigerian prince,
00:13a stranger offering millions of dollars, in exchange for a little app moving money out of the country.
00:21So, I started asking myself, how does a message like this actually convince people?
00:26This is my own fictional prince, Samson, the Nigerian prince.
00:31It's a mock-up created with AI, and to become a Nigerian prince, you really need only three things.
00:39A face, a title, and of course, a story that people might believe.
00:45Most scam messages follow a similar pattern, a dramatic story about money trapped in a foreign account,
00:52and a stranger who needs your help to move it.
00:56After you received the email and you respond, you are already stepping into the trap.
01:02Another common tactic is introducing additional characters, a supposed lawyer and a bank official.
01:09But these characters are often part of the same story, just to scam you.
01:16The same prince is acting as the lawyer, and at the same time, is also acting as a bank official.
01:24Eventually, the story reaches a turning point.
01:28The money is ready to be transferred.
01:30But suddenly, a problem appears.
01:34Taxes, processing fees, or legal documents that require payments.
01:40And that is when victims are asked to send money.
01:45Understanding these camps may be the first step to avoiding them.
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