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Category: Scammer Watch

Romance Scams Cost Victims $1.16 Billion in 2025

Posted on February 25, 2026
romance scams

USA TODAY – Organized online romance scams now extract massive sums: ~11,200 victims lost ~$398M in Q3 2025 alone (median loss ~$2,218), and total reported losses reached ~$1.16B in the first nine months of 2025, with some individuals losing six-figure savings. Criminal groups cultivate relationships for months via social media and messaging apps, then request money through gift cards, wires, or crypto, increasingly reinforced by AI-generated photos, voices, and video; once funds are sent, recovery is rare, so the only reliable safeguard is to cut off contact the moment a new online partner asks for money or financial information.

See full article at USA Today

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Dating App Users Hide Identities as Security Fears Rise

Posted on February 16, 2026
2025 In-app User Privacy Report cover, with the Verve logo.

PPC LAND – A 2025 Verve survey of 4K U.S. and U.K. users shows dating-app privacy behavior shifting: people are less willing to share identity data such as names, phone numbers, and emails, but more willing to share location and even health details because those improve matching. Over half of users now refuse to share any personal data at all, mainly due to breach and hacking fears after repeated security incidents. Women and younger users are the most cautious. The trend creates a problem for dating platforms, which need identity information for verification, safety, and payments, but face declining trust in how they handle it.

See full article at PPC Land

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UK Law Forces Dating Apps to Proactively Block Cyberflashing

Posted on January 8, 2026
New law set to protect dating app users from ‘vile crime’ of cyberflashing

THE INDEPENDENT – A new UK law makes cyberflashing a priority offence under the Online Safety Act, forcing dating and social platforms to proactively detect and block unsolicited nude images. Regulators, including Ofcom, can fine non-compliant companies up to 10% of global revenue or block services. The move shifts responsibility from users to platforms, with Bumble cited as an early example through its AI-based nudity detection. The goal is to significantly improve online safety, particularly for women and girls.

See full article at The Independent

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India’s DPDP Act Cracks Down on Dating Apps’ Invisible User Tracking

Posted on December 11, 2025
Dating apps data privacy

BAR AND BENCH – Dating apps often continue tracking users even after accounts are deleted through cookies, SDKs, shadow profiles, cross-app identifiers, and third-party data sharing. India’s new Digital Personal Data Protection Act (DPDP Act) and the 2025 Rules directly challenge these practices by enforcing rights such as mandatory data erasure, purpose-limited processing, stronger security standards, restricted cross-border transfers, and heavy penalties for violations. Under the new law, dating platforms must justify and minimise any retained data, improve transparency, and overhaul vague retention policies.

See full article at Bar and Bench

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Ofcom’s Approach to Implementing the Online Safety Act

Posted on November 20, 2025
Ofcom logo with the tagline 'making communications work for everyone'

OFCOM – Ofcom is phasing in the UK’s Online Safety Act through 2027, creating a full regulatory system that makes online platforms legally responsible for tackling illegal content, protecting children, improving age-verification, publishing transparency reports, and strengthening terms of service. They’ve already issued key rules on illegal harms and child safety, and the next steps include new guidance for protecting women and girls, requirements for handling data about deceased children, super-complaints, accredited technologies for detecting child sexual abuse and terrorism content, media-literacy standards, and extra duties for major platforms (like controls for fraudulent ads, ID verification, and protections for journalism and democratic content). By 2027, major services will need to comply fully, publish public safety reports, meet stricter enforcement standards, and possibly even face new requirements for app stores and expanded priority offences such as cyberflashing and self-harm encouragement.

See full article at Ofcom website

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FBI Warns: Scammers Using Fake ‘Verification’ Sites to Target Dating App Users

Posted on November 3, 2025
A close-up of hands holding a smartphone

BITDEFENDER – The FBI is warning that scammers are tricking people on dating apps into fake “verification” checks that look legitimate but are actually traps. After gaining someone’s trust, the scammer asks them to verify their identity on a separate site for safety reasons. That site asks for personal details and credit card information, then secretly signs the victim up for monthly subscriptions to fake dating services. Victims often discover the fraud only when mystery charges appear on their credit card. These scams not only steal money but also personal information that can be sold or used for identity theft.

See full article at Bitdefender

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Match Group Launches “The Unbreaking Project” to Combat Romance Scams and Support Victims

Posted on October 30, 2025
Logo of Match Group

LINKEDIN – Match Group has launched The Unbreaking Project with Kate Kleinert, who experienced a romance scam and now works to protect others, together with Advocating Against Romance Scammers and the Center for Combating Elder Financial Abuse. The initiative helps law enforcement handle romance scams more effectively and provides emotional and practical support for victims. It offers free virtual training, survivor care packages, and education to help prevent future scams.

See full article at LinkedIn

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Romance Fraud up 9% in the UK, FCA Urges Better Online Safeguards

Posted on October 20, 2025
Romance Fraud Up 9% in the UK, FCA Urges Better Online Safeguards

PYMNTS – Reports of romance fraud in the UK rose 9% in 2024–2025, costing victims ~106M, according to a new review by the Financial Conduct Authority. The FCA said banks, payment firms, and online platforms must step up detection and prevention, as 85% of such scams begin online. It urged greater user education, stronger anti-fraud systems, and closer cooperation between financial and digital platforms to curb losses.

See full article at PYMNTS

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Hannah Schwartz, RSVP – CEO Interview

Posted on October 8, 2008

Hannah_schwartzInside Internet Dating Show includes interview with the co-Founder of RSVP.com.au.

 OPW INTERVIEW — Oct 8 — I interviewed Hannah Schwartz, CEO of RSVP in Australia, on the subject of scamming. – Mark Brooks

What kind of scamming have you encountered in the past on RSVP?
We've seen two types of scamming. The first tries to take advantage of a potentially lonely person. I think we tend to call that the Nigerian scam.  We also see a lot of scams originating from Africa.  It usually involves a network of people abroad putting up fake profiles. The profiles are usually of women who court the men and pretend great interest. They talk of a life of wanting to move to Australia and plan to come visit, but at the last minute they unfortunately can't make it. They email the prospect and say their brother-in-law couldn't get the ticket. "Can you wire the money instead?"  Women and men are just as likely to be the target of these scams and what we see is that trust (via email and phone) is built over 3-6 months before the request for money comes into play.

Another type of scam we get involves our hybrid payment plan, where you pay as you go. We've received attempts to scam the model by buying large numbers of the stamps upfront. We now have triggers in place that tell us if a certain level of purchase has happened. We search the IP address of where the purchase originated and have even gone so far as to not allow credit cards that are foreign issues.

Is there anything else you do to try to beat the scammers?
We've spent a lot of time on our site educating our members about these types of scams, but we're not done. We have to constantly educate our users, as well as innovate our back-end systems. We work very closely with authorities, when appropriate. But we also have our own protocols in place where we know some of the telltale signs and bring down suspicious profiles before scammers can make contact with our members. We work very closely with the payment processors who keep master lists of bogus credit cards. We maintain records of anybody we've deemed criminal or suspect and have instituted a warning system when such persons return to the site.

It sounds like you've found a way to catch scammers pre-signup?
Every profile that goes up on our site does not go live instantly. It is proofed by us first. So, you can join up but that doesn't mean we'll bring you live. In essence, we prevent scammers from becoming viewable to the public.

In general, have you seen the number of scamming incidents or scamming attempts increase or decrease?
I would say scamming has leveled.  I don't think we've seen any indication that it's on the rise. I think there is just a steady trickle and because we've put in more and more controls, we actually are getting smarter at preventing it.

How would you like to encourage the Internet dating industry to work together to combat scamming?
It would be terrific if, in the future, the dating industry had a master suspect list that included IP addresses. It would be great if we could share that, as well as develop a means of communicating with each other quickly when new scams crop up. There are security programs out there, like McAfee, that post the latest types of viruses and spyware. It would be terrific if we had something similar – a central place where scams are posted.

See all posts on RSVP

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RussianScamCheck.org

Posted on August 21, 2008

Russianscamcheck_logo DATING AD NETWORK — Aug 21 — Interview with Damien Skolnik of RussianScamCheck.com

Q: What was the reason for starting anti-scam services?
A: During the first 2-3 years in [the flower] business we started to note that approximately one of every 20 orders was sent to the address without intended recipient – the person was either not living there, or wasn't ever seen. This situation led us to the conclusion that we are, somehow, helping some people who are trying to earn money by scamming Americans. The service is called RussianScamCheck.org. The main idea of this site is to help our clients to check if their foreign lady isn't a fake. Basically, for $40 our courier delivers one beautifully wrapped rose, with a message on a card to the woman of client's concern. If the girl exist, she opens the door and gets rose and a card, shows us some piece of ID and signs the acknowledgement of receipt. For an additional small charge, courier also makes a photo of this woman and we send it to the client.

Q: With permission from the woman, right?
A: Yes, of course.

Q: Do you have any statistics regarding such scam checks?
A: Approximately 80% of all scam checks we conduct lead to scammers of different kinds. While the other 20% are absolutely normal people, who then become recipients for the gifts and flowers of our clients.

This original exclusive interview was made for daters.ru

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