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  • 1 day ago
In this episode of My Hustle, Samson looks at how scammers carefully craft fake personas to weaponize the legendary “prince” con, that pulls victims into the shadowy world of Yahoo schemes where nothing is real.

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Transcript
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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