Proof Examples: Urgency & Threats
These are simulated examples for education. Real scams often look like this to pressure you into acting fast.
Example 1: “Account locked in 30 minutes”
- Time pressure: “30 minutes”
- Threat language: “permanently restricted”
- Vague claim: “unusual activity” without details
- Push to act now: button or link
Example 2: “Delivery held — pay fee now”
- Urgency trigger: package anxiety
- Small payment trap: “fee” to hook you
- Interaction bait: “Reply YES”
- Suspicious link style: random domain
Example 3: Fake security popup (“Call now”)
- Panic language: “infected”, “data loss”
- Forced action: “Do not close this window”
- Call pressure: “support immediately”
- Fake support: phone number shown on screen
Reminder: Real companies don’t threaten you or rush you like this. If something feels off, step back and verify using a trusted contact method.
Ask Cypher to check this safely →