Ich brauche Hilfe dabei. Einer meiner Freunde hat solche E -Mails erhalten. Er denkt darüber nach, zur Polizei zu gehen. Ich habe seinen Standort mit seiner IP -Adresse überprüft und es zeigt Berlin, Deutschland. Aber er kann ein VPN verwenden. idk. Hat jemand eine Situation wie diese ausgesetzt? Oder kann jemand etwas vorschlagen? Jede Hilfe wäre notwendig.

    https://www.reddit.com/gallery/1je529a

    Von TitttySuckker

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    28 Kommentare

    1. Simply ignore it. It’s just spam that is sent out en masse.

      If he is still using the mentioned password somewhere, then he should change it.

    2. RetroNightowl on

      Gotten this before aswell, it’s just a scam, change passwords and delete, they’re just trying to intimidate

    3. You can simply ignore it. I received the exact same email with the only difference, that they wanted USD instead of EUR (are they dumb?) and the wallet address was different.

      They said they filmed me watching strange porn, but how they managed to do that with me not having a webcam and my phone turned face down when I’m at home will remain a secret.

      There’s no need to involve the police as they cannot do anything about that. Delete and carry on.

    4. Scammers buy large batches of email + password lists online.

      Then they send these auto-generated e-mails. If there was ever a video caught there would be at least a screenshot or other „evidence“ included.

      But the scammers have nothing.

      Change the password though. Its public now, actually the last paragraph in the scammers e-mail is good advice.

    5. Ive gotten quite a few of them as well, i never bothered. I think going to the police is useless. Ist most likely encrypted multiple times i guess. Theese people have nothing against you or your friend and hope for the fear factor, mostly on guys/teens for making them question their search history or sth. I suggest just blocking the mail adress. If you go to the police, they will take the complaint and maybe do some research. But with how popular theese mails have become i guess they already got plenty of those.

    6. Brother, is the first time you receive some spam?

      And you want to bring this to the police?

      lol – just update your password, spam filter and move on

    7. This is a common scam that can easily be ignored. The scammer is bluffing and has no videos or control over your devices. They just send those emails out in mass and hope a few people will fall for it.

      If that’s in fact the real password for the email account, make sure to change it right away and set up 2-factor authentication if you haven’t already. The scammer likely got the password from a data breach. You can check if your accounts have been in any known data breaches on this website:
      https://haveibeenpwned.com/

      If you’re still unsure, I’ve heard Malwarebytes offers a free scanning tool, that you could run on the PC. I haven’t tested it myself though.

    8. TitttySuckker on

      One more thing:

      He has changed the password, but on last January, 2024 from My friend’s instagram account, there was a post and story about bitcoin, which was not posted by my friend. someone hacked his instagram account.

      and when he checked, no other device was logged-in from his account.

      Plus, in the LinkedIn his entire profile, with profile picture and the language of the LinkedIn was changed from english to Chinese. same as previous, no other device was connected with his account.

    9. I’ve been receiving a different version of a similar threat message. It claims that a spyware called Pegasus has been installed on my iPhone, and I’m being threatened with things I haven’t even done. These emails come as spam and I’ve received the same one about 4 or 5 times over the past 3 or 4 months.
      What’s strange is that it looks like I’m sending the emails to myself, and they end up in my spam folder. At first, I was really worried, I thought my information had been stolen and that my phone was hacked. But then I copied the entire message and searched it on Google. When I saw that many other people had received the same thing, I felt much better knowing I wasn’t alone.
      Even just for research purposes, you could copy the entire email and search it on Google or other search engines, maybe others have received the same type of spam too.
      I believe the main reason behind this is the data leaks that happen when we use our email addresses on many different platforms, and unfortunately, that information ends up in the hands of bad people and on the dark web.
      I don’t really know how to prevent it completely, but I do my best to protect all of my accounts. I delete accounts I no longer use, and I regularly clear my Google history to keep things clean and private. You can even send this message to an AI to check if it’s a scam, and to see if similar emails have been sent to others.

    10. running to police is mostly useless, its 99,99% a cracked server or user pc send this email so its mostly waste of police time

      im shocked how often users from me reporting spam to police

    11. You were lucky he did not forbid posting his email on reddit. 🤣
      So it’s okay, carry on and don’t worry.

    12. my_brain_hurts_a_lot on

      I would even involve the police. Not that I believe it amounts to anything but it helps building a case or change legislation in the future.

    13. small_DQmon on

      99% sure its a scam, a youtuber got the same Email before and nothing happend when he didn’t respond

    14. Separate_Theme_597 on

      Scam, he needs to change all his passwords. i recommend to look up his saved passwords write them on paper with the Site and then start with the email adress and let a anti virus software run on all divices (I recommend Kaspersky) after the Emailadress start vorm the top and change all passwords and write them in a small book. thats the best way. and activate 2fa where it is possible

    15. ansithethird on

      My friend also got the same mail, albeit in English, with <hisusername>#007, in the exact same template.

    16. Judging by the OP’s name, I am concerned that this might not be a scam! 😅

    17. It’s clear that this scammer is bad at what they do, because the listed wallet has no transactions listed in the blockchain :). Of course, they could be creating a new wallet for each scam. But still, this seems pretty weak.

      [https://www.blockchain.com/explorer/addresses/btc/1Q7vmLbKxVNrzo63NciicMJXJUPPtmh73k](https://www.blockchain.com/explorer/addresses/btc/1Q7vmLbKxVNrzo63NciicMJXJUPPtmh73k)

      [https://www.blockchain.com/explorer/addresses/bch/1Q7vmLbKxVNrzo63NciicMJXJUPPtmh73k](https://www.blockchain.com/explorer/addresses/bch/1Q7vmLbKxVNrzo63NciicMJXJUPPtmh73k)

    18. djnorthstar on

      Its a scare scam… they send this shit around since minimum the last 4 Years… Put it in the trash.

    19. Rodrigo-Berolino on

      I’m getting this scam from time to time always claiming to have videos of me enjoying myself watching videos.
      Fun fact, there is no camera attached to my PC… 😆

    20. Busy_Building_9490 on

      Just ignore it and never click on any link that you get sent. I receive these kind of emails on a regular basis, unfortunately.

    21. Environmental_Bat142 on

      Unless he really believes there are some pictures of him floating around, he should just delete the mail. This is highly likely the case based on the mail. If there are however some pictures/videos he needs to involve the police.

    22. I’ve also received an Email like that, so this really made me laugh.
      It’s an obvious scam.
      If you wanted to truly threaten someone, you wouldn’t write the mail in such a generic way.
      And I’m sure that you’d provide proof that you’re the real deal, by attaching videos and images to be used for blackmailing.

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