Today’s digital age In, cyber fraud cases have increased rapidly. Cyber frauds are hunting in a new way. The easiest way for fraud is to implicate innocent people with earning or luring government schemes. Now a case has come up regarding a new scheme, which has been claimed that Prime Minister Narendra Modi has started a new scheme, so that citizens can earn up to Rs 10,000 per day. The Press Information Bureau (PIB) fact check has termed this claim as a fake, calling it a fake.
What did Pib say?
PIB has issued a serious warning about a fake website, making a false claim to offer a new government scheme. The site alleges that Prime Minister Narendra Modi has started a project from which citizens can earn up to Rs 10,000 per day. According to the PIB Fact Czech post, this claim is completely baseless and designed to cheat the public.
This way falsely claimed
The fake website further claimed to implicate the common people that “after PM Narendra Modi launched his new scheme, there have been long queues at the ATM, so that people can earn up to Rs 10,000 per day.” It also deception that “thousands of Indians have earned from Rs 80,000 to Rs 350,000 in the first month”. The PIB denied the announcement of any such government plan, saying, “This sensational title is designed to woo people to share their personal and financial information. However, it is completely a lie.”
PIB fact check warning
The PIB Fact Czech team has issued a clear warning about the scam. He has termed the claim as fake and urged the citizens to be vigilant. Sharing personal or financial information on such websites can cause identity theft, financial loss or other types of fraud. In March, Facebook announced that it had taken action against fraud activity by removing more than 23,000 Facebook pages and accounts targeting individuals in Brazil and India. The scamsters used various strategies, including deepfhek, to cheat users by taking the form of well-known individual finance affected, cricket players and commercial personalities of these countries. These fake accounts supported fraudulent investment apps and gambling websites.
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