Scams like this work otherwise they would not exist.
Back in the days when telephone signals came through a wire in the wall and TV signals came over the air, TV announcers would urge people to continue watching their channel by saying “Don’t touch that dial.”
You old folks may remember that you had to physically turn a dial to turn the set on and adjust the volume and use another dial to tune in one of the 13 channels (3 or 4 of which might be available in your area).
The modern equivalent is “Don’t click that link.” If you get a notice about any kind of account being compromised. Hang up (close the message) and contact the bank or service or whatever using their website or published phone number.
Scams like this work otherwise they would not exist.
Back in the days when telephone signals came through a wire in the wall and TV signals came over the air, TV announcers would urge people to continue watching their channel by saying “Don’t touch that dial.”
You old folks may remember that you had to physically turn a dial to turn the set on and adjust the volume and use another dial to tune in one of the 13 channels (3 or 4 of which might be available in your area).
The modern equivalent is “Don’t click that link.” If you get a notice about any kind of account being compromised. Hang up (close the message) and contact the bank or service or whatever using their website or published phone number.