18.4 C
New York
May 17, 2025
Africa Cybercrime Ghana Internet Internet safety Ivory Coast news Nigeria Society Technology World news Young people

How west Africa’s online fraudsters moved into sextortion

How west Africa’s online fraudsters moved into sextortion

With ‘hustle kingdoms’ teaching young people the tricks of the trade, there has been a surge in blackmailing crimes

In the late 90s and early 2000s, as internet connectivity began penetrating west Africa, young people soon realised that individuals in North America and Europe with access to more money than them and potentially susceptible to blackmail were now reachable by the click of a button.

Along came the “Nigerian prince” letters, a famous scamming technique employed by online fraudsters – known as Yahoo boys in Nigeria, Sakwa boys of Ghana and the brouteurs of Ivory Coast – preying on unsuspecting targets across the web. The emails typically involved someone pretending to be Nigerian royalty and asking for money, a claim so outlandish that victims presumed it couldn’t be a lie.

Continue reading…

Related posts

US moves to list giraffes under Endangered Species Act for first time

TheWorldsNews

Eritrean refugees say they are being arbitrarily detained in Ethiopian camps

TheWorldsNews

US fears Russia’s influence in Africa after Niger junta cancels security pact

TheWorldsNews

Pin It on Pinterest

Share This