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Tech Executive Falls Victim to $450k Scam on Dating Website

finance.yahoo.com

16 points by aniken 3 years ago · 17 comments

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lbotos 3 years ago

Wow. Native ads are getting wild.

In the middle of a story about getting crypto scammed:

“If you're interested in legitimate and lucrative investment opportunities, StartEngine presents a reliable platform where users can invest in promising startups. With a community of 1.8 million potential investors, StartEngine is shaping the future of startup financing and provides a trustworthy avenue for people seeking ways to grow their wealth.”

  • netsharc 3 years ago

    I thought this paragraph was a quote of the scammer's message to the victim, but incorrectly formatted in the article...

    Well, StartEngine, you're getting the opposite of advertisement.

  • sharts 3 years ago

    Indeed. Everything internet is a pig butchering scam. MBAs and tech entrepreneurs have ruined the what was supposed to be an information superhighway.

kkyr 3 years ago

I find it difficult to sympathise with her. How you entrust someone you’ve never met with $450K is beyond me.

  • netsharc 3 years ago

    I wonder how persuasive this "Ancel Mali" can be. I guess with a known weakness (desire for connection) the scammer can game the victim by emotionally manipulating them, e.g. maybe he told her he gets an x% refer-a-friend bonus if she "invested" on this seemingly 3rd party site, "Why haven't you done it yet? It's not you giving me money, it's this site! Besides you'll get a high ROI quickly! Don't you love me?!", and playing a hot and cold game of being nice some days and then ignoring her other days, because "you still haven't invested!".

    I suppose a lot of people are good at this kind of manipulation, e.g. members of cults like Scientology...

  • enduser 3 years ago

    The scammers play into longing for easy money and a fantasy of jet-setting life.

    I got contacted by a scammer via text message and trolled them for many days before tipping my hand. It was a very slick and sophisticated soft sell, a continuous invitation to ask the scammer about the opportunity to get in on their supposed inside tips and big wins.

  • hsjqllzlfkf 3 years ago

    It never ceases to amaze me how callous people can be. Do you also blame rape victims because they were asking for it?

  • AussieWog93 3 years ago

    I keep a fair amount of cash in a bank account whose managers I've never met, and I'm not even lonely!

    • tekla 3 years ago

      Yes, since this is comparable at all to this situation.

      I assume you didn't decide to use your bank account based on Hinge or similar dating app

JoeyBananas 3 years ago

> Shreya Datta spent months swiping through dating apps searching for a connection when she encountered "Ancel Mali," a self-proclaimed wine trader from France, on Hinge.

The context in which this sentence is presented is perfect, and I genuinely laughed my ass off upon reading it.

nubinetwork 3 years ago

I stopped using online dating roughly 15 years ago because most people have no intention of meeting, and only use it to pad their ego (much like instagram). Everyone else on there is a scam.

anikenOP 3 years ago

What’s interesting in this case is that it’s a female that got scammed. “Pig Butchering Scheme” is a strange name to call it.

  • jowea 3 years ago

    The latest report lacks this information, but the 2010 FBI report has this to say.

    > The gender gap in crime reporting has dramatically narrowed. Early in IC3’s history, men reported crime at a ratio of more than 2.5 to 1 over women. Today, men and women report crimes almost equally. In many states, a slightly higher proportion of women than men report crimes to IC3. The narrowed reporting gap between the sexes has significantly impacted the dollar loss between men and women over the last 10 years. During the course of IC3’s early history, men reported a loss of more than $2.00 for every $1.00 reported by a woman. According to the 2010 data, men now report a loss of $1.25 for every $1.00 reported by a woman. [0]

    The SCMP[1] and this non-profit[2] say a majority of victim are women.

    [0] https://www.ic3.gov/Media/PDF/AnnualReport/2010_IC3Report.pd...

    [1] https://www.scmp.com/news/people-culture/social-welfare/arti...

    [2] https://www.globalantiscam.org/post/update-statistics-of-peo...

  • AussieWog93 3 years ago

    It comes from a Chinese analogy/metaphor. First you feed the pig to fatten it up, then when you're ready you butcher it.

    Pig butchers will often spend weeks or months building up trust in a specific victim without even hinting at money.

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