Reporting scams to the appropriate legal authorities in your location is an important process to make the internet safer for your family, friends and the broader community.
In Singapore, the following authorities play an active role to investigate and ultimately take action against scams:
Pay close attention to what is in your Web browser’s address bar the next time you log in to WhatsApp Web as it could be a new variant of phishing scams instead.
Businesses not registered with the Singapore SMS Sender ID Registry by January 31 will have their messages labelled as "Likely-SCAM", as the country rolls out more measures to combat online scams.
Singapore How to Report scams to Singapore Authorities Reporting scams to the appropriate legal authorities in your location is an important process to make the internet safer for your family, friends...
We have observed a new wave of scam emails (known as Business Email Compromise or BEC) in NUS, some of which unfortunately involved individuals falling prey and leading to personal financial loss. Unl...
(Singapore) - Beware of phishing scam with fake Whatsapp web page
Report phishing scams to reportphish.ai ... See MoreSee Less
SG police: Beware of phishing scam involving fake ‘WhatsApp Web’ pages
www.thestar.com.my
Pay close attention to what is in your Web browser’s address bar the next time you log in to WhatsApp Web as it could be a new variant of phishing scams instead.2 CommentsComment on Facebook
Singapore - Police issue warning about fake WhatsApp Web phishing websites ... See MoreSee Less
Police issue warning about fake WhatsApp Web phishing websites
www.channelnewsasia.com
Victims would only find out that their accounts have been compromised when they are notified by their contacts of unusual requests.0 CommentsComment on Facebook
Singapore, introduces tech to stop SMS scams ... See MoreSee Less
Singapore to tag unregistered SMS senders as 'likely scam'
www.zdnet.com
Businesses not registered with the Singapore SMS Sender ID Registry by January 31 will have their messages labelled as "Likely-SCAM", as the country rolls out more measures to combat online scams.1 CommentsComment on Facebook
Singapore, Police probe of 271 people over scams - $5.3m lost ... See MoreSee Less
271 people under probe over scams that cost victims over $5.3m
www.straitstimes.com
The suspects, aged between 16 and 81, are believed to be involved in more than 950 cases of scams. Read more at straitstimes.com.0 CommentsComment on Facebook
Singapore - Do you know how to report scams to the appropriate authorities ?
Learn more at reportphish.ai/singapore/
Follow our page and stay up to date with key scams, how to identify and avoid them. ... See MoreSee Less
Singapore - ReportPhish
reportphish.ai
Singapore How to Report scams to Singapore Authorities Reporting scams to the appropriate legal authorities in your location is an important process to make the internet safer for your family, friends...5 CommentsComment on Facebook
Singapore, SingPost and Singtel scams - Beware ! ... See MoreSee Less
Scammers are posing as SingPost, Singtel via phishing messages | Frontier Enterprise
www.frontier-enterprise.com
Here is a breakdown of how threat actors are masquerading as Singapore Post and Singtel and target victims through phishing emails.0 CommentsComment on Facebook
Singapore, NUS - voice phishing calls and scams on the increase ... See MoreSee Less
Be vigilant against voice phishing calls and scams
nusit.nus.edu.sg
We have observed a new wave of scam emails (known as Business Email Compromise or BEC) in NUS, some of which unfortunately involved individuals falling prey and leading to personal financial loss. Unl...0 CommentsComment on Facebook
Singapore, fake visa application webpage ... See MoreSee Less
Fake and scam website for visa application
www.mfa.gov.sg
Fake and scam website for visa application0 CommentsComment on Facebook
Singapore, phishing scam victim loses S$600k ! ... See MoreSee Less
OCBC phishing scams: Teen admits being part of syndicate funnelling about S$600,000 in scam proceeds
www.channelnewsasia.com
Brayden Cheng Ming Yan was part of a local syndicate that operated across Telegram groups and helped overseas criminals with money laundering.0 CommentsComment on Facebook