Remove “Consider This Message As Your Last Warning” scam email
The “Consider This Message As Your Last Warning” email is a generic sextortion scam. It’s a type of scam that tries to scare users into paying large sums of money in order to prevent malicious actors from releasing users’ explicit videos, which do not actually exist. These types of email scams are very common, and most users whose email addresses have been leaked will receive one occasionally. This particular sextortion scam claims that the sender has hacked your system and made a video of you watching pornography. They threaten to release the video and send it to all your contacts, unless you agree to pay $5,000. The email’s contents are completely fake, and there is no need to engage with it further or pay the requested sum of money.
Sextortion email scams are all more or less identical to one another, even if the campaigns are operated by different cybercriminals. The emails always use alarming subject lines to grab recipients’ attention. This particular email has the “Consider This Message As Your Last Warning” subject line, which sounds very aggressive and serious, so users who check their spam may notice the email and feel compelled to open it.
Like with all sextortion scam emails, the sender of the “Consider This Message As Your Last Warning” email claims that your system has been hacked and data stolen. The sender claims that your computer has been infected with a Trojan virus that gave them full access and control over your device. The sender further alleges to have spied on you through the camera and microphone and claims to have created a video showing you watching pornography alongside the explicit video you were supposedly watching. They then threaten to distribute this video to all of your contacts unless $5,000 in Bitcoin is paid.
As we’ve said already, the content of these emails is entirely fake, and the email can be safely disregarded.
The full “Consider This Message As Your Last Warning” email scam is below:
Subject:FINAL NOTICE
Consider this message as your last warning.
We hacked your system!
We have copied all the data from your device to our own servers.
Curious videos were recorded from your camera and your actions while watching porn.
Your device was infected with our virus when you visited the porn site.
The Trojan virus gives us full access, allows us to control your device.
The virus allows not only to see your screen, but also to turn on your camera, microphone, without your knowledge.
We took over the video from your screen and camera, then we mounted a video in which you can see you watching porn in one part of the screen and masturbating in the other.
But that’s not all! We have access to all the contacts in your phone book and social networks.
It won’t take us long to send this video to your friends, family and friends on social networks, messengers and email in minutes.
We have a lot of audio recordings of your personal conversations, where a lot of “interesting” things are revealed!
This information can destroy your reputation once and for all in a matter of minutes.
You have an opportunity to prevent irreversible consequences.
To do this:
Transfer 5000$ USD (US dollars) to our bitcoin wallet.
Don’t know how to make a transfer? Enter the query “Buy bitcoins” into the google search field.
Our bitcoin wallet is below
bc1qfgtfgxsychphe9hxtnfp83xsg2fa5fteesf270
After making the payment, your video and audio recordings will be completely destroyed and you can be 100% sure that we won’t bother you again.
You have time to think about it and make the transfer – 50 hours!
After you read this letter, we will get an automatic notification. From that moment on, the timer will start.It is useless to complain, because bitcoin-wallets cannot be tracked, as well as the mail from which the letter arrived to you.
We also do not advise you to send this letter to anybody.In this case the system will automatically send a request to the server, and all data will be published in social networks and sent to all your contacts we extracted from your email and we also have a special package for your spous .
You will not be able to solve the problem by changing passwords in social networks, as all the information is already downloaded to the cluster of our servers.
Think about what your reputation means to you and how much the consequences will be if you think its a bluff wait for time to expire .
You have 50 hours.
The scammers behind these sextortion scams always use various scare tactics to coerce users into making payments. Sextortion emails are typically written in a very mocking and threatening tone, aiming to force recipients to feel ashamed of their supposed pornography viewing habits. Even users who have never accessed pornography websites may be manipulated into believing that an explicit video associated with them will be shared with their contacts, potentially damaging their reputation. For those unfamiliar with sextortion scam emails, this can be convincing enough to make a payment.
It’s important to stress that sextortion emails are always fake. While the wording may vary depending on the cybercriminal group behind the scam, these emails are generally easy to identify. Any email in which the sender claims to have hacked a computer and created an explicit video of the recipient is always fake.
Why am I receiving sextortion scam emails?
While some sextortion campaigns may target users randomly, most recipients receive these emails because their email addresses have been exposed in a data breach. You can verify whether your email addresses have been compromised on HaveIBeenPwned. Unfortunately, once leaked, email addresses are sold on hacker forums, where cybercriminals purchase them for malicious purposes.
We should also mention that some sextortion emails include users’ passwords. When users recognize a password they have used, they may mistakenly believe their computers are indeed infected with malware. In reality, passwords are often obtained in the same manner as email addresses. If a service does not have adequate security measures and stores passwords in plain text, these credentials can be stolen during a breach and later sold on hacker forums.
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