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Smart blocks 2B scam texts, continues collab with NTC, CICC

by Smart Communications Inc. | Dec 02, 2024
PLDT’s wireless unit, Smart Communications, Inc. (Smart) has stepped up the crackdown against text scams as fraudsters turn to fake cell towers to victimize the public.
In the first ten months of the year, Smart has prevented almost two billion malicious text messages from reaching customers. It has also blacklisted almost a million numbers tied to scams and other fraudulent activities in the same period.
 
“In October alone, Smart thwarted more than 200 million malicious text messages and blocked more than 46,000 mobile numbers being used to scam the public. We urge our customers to be vigilant against text messages embedded with hyperlinks as these usually lead to phishing domains,” warned Patrick Santos, FVP and Chief Information Security Officer at PLDT and Smart.
 
Smart continues to look deeper into the use of fake cell towers. These illegal devices allow scammers to push messages directly to mobile users in a localized area, bypassing the telco network’s infrastructure and often appearing as legitimate messages from trusted sources. To help detect where these fake cell towers operate, Smart has added a location field in its ‘HuliScam’ public anti-scam reporting portal to note areas where customers usually receive these messages.
 
The PLDT Group has also engaged the National Telecommunications Commission (NTC) and the Cybercrime Investigation and Coordinating Center (CICC) for collaborative efforts to fight SMShing that include the investigation, apprehension, and prosecution of scammers.
 
Likewise, the group’s #BeCyberSmart and #MagingCyberSmart campaign continues to share practical information on schemes used by scammers to defraud the public. These can be easily remembered using the acronym – SCAM.
 
S is for ‘Suspicious’. Never answer calls or respond to messages from unverified or unknown numbers. Banks do not usually initiate calls nor send SMS asking for your bank account details. Likewise, official bank and telco representatives will never ask for OTPs.
 
C is for ‘Clickbait’. Scam texts often bait victims with too-good-to-be-true offers or prize winnings, urging them to click the link to avail of the limited-time offer.
 
A is for ‘Alarming’. Scammers create a sense of fear or dread to prod potential victims into sharing sensitive information.
 
M stands for ‘Malicious’. Text scams or emails are often accompanied by a link that leads to a phishing website.
 
Smart urges customers who receive text scams and other SMShing messages to report these incidents to its anti-scam platform at smart.com.ph/huliscam. Aside from the location, the portal will also ask customers to provide the mobile number that sent the unsolicited message, the suspicious message, as well as the malicious link embedded in the text message.
 
Other than the HuliScam portal, customers may also report cyber threats to Smart’s verified and official social media pages—Smart Communications on Facebook and @SmartCARES on X—or call hotline *888.
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