Cybercrime used to be about breaching firewalls. Now, it’s about breaching trust. In 2025, criminals aren’t hacking systems—they’re hacking people. From Nevada small businesses to retirees scrolling Facebook Marketplace, these scams are evolving faster than most folks can update their antivirus.
If you think you’d “never fall for one,” think again. These cons thrive on urgency, fear, and fake authority. Here’s what’s hitting hardest this year—and how to fight back.
- The “Crypto Job” Trap
It starts with a remote side-gig ad or a friendly DM. It ends with requests for “starter deposits,” “wallet verification,” or ID selfies.
Red flags: unsolicited job offers, fake dashboards, pressure to send “verifying” payments.
Smart move: never send crypto, gift cards, or “starter” money. Real jobs pay you, not the other way around. - Impersonation Calls
The voice sounds official—IRS, your bank, even your boss. The caller ID looks legit. That’s the trick.
Red flags: “don’t hang up,” “urgent verification,” “keep this confidential.”
Smart move: hang up and call back using a known number. Real organizations don’t punish you for verifying. - Smishing: Scam Texting
The classic phishing email has gone mobile. Texts about “missed tolls,” “delivery issues,” or “account resets” now lure you into credential traps.
Red flags: shortened URLs, odd domains, “wrong-number” conversations that veer into
crypto talk.
Smart move: don’t tap unknown links. Screenshot and delete instead. Use mobile security
apps with link protection. - Fake Tolls & Rigged ATMs
Scammers are cashing in on chaos. Fake toll emails target non-existent vehicles, while ATM
card slots are rigged with skimmers or cash traps.
Red flags: toll alerts for cars you don’t own, ATM hardware that feels loose or bulky.
Smart move: use official toll apps. At ATMs, give the card slot a wiggle—if it moves, walk away. - Shopping Scams & Malvertising
Deals too good to be true usually are. Clone websites and malicious ads can drain your wallet before checkout finishes.
Red flags: “exclusive” prices, forced app installs, or checkout redirects to sketchy domains.
Smart move: stick to trusted retailers. If your password manager doesn’t autofill your login, that’s a red flag—it doesn’t recognize the site.
Red-Flag Cheat Sheet
- “Urgent” or “confidential” instructions
- Requests to move chats to WhatsApp or Telegram
- Payment demanded in crypto or gift cards
- URLs that don’t perfectly match official domains
- Anyone asking for remote access or seed phrases
If something feels rushed or secret, pause. Verify. Use a number or portal you already trust.
| Control | Owner | Result |
| MFA on email, payroll, and banking | IT/Finance | Blocks most account takeovers |
| 45-minute “Scam Spotting” workshop | IT/HR | Team can name 10 red flags escalation steps |
| Vendor payment callback policy | Finance | Prevents fake wire fraud |
| Mobile security & monthly patching | IT | Stops malicious links on phones |
| Endpoint monitoring & dark-web alerts | MSP | Detects breaches before data leaks |
Final Thought
Scams evolve. Common sense doesn’t. If it’s urgent, emotional, or “too good to be true,” it’s probably bait.
Need help hardening your defenses? SpeakGeek PCs protects local Nevada businesses and families with smart, affordable cybersecurity and IT support.
Call (702) 472-8229 or visit speakgeekpcs.com.
To see this blog and other cybersecurity articles, go to speakgeekpcs.com/blog.


