SIGNAL GRIDv0.1

Scammers are using FaceTime to pose as banks and steal your money. Here's what to watch for.

1 sources2 storiesFirst seen 7/14/2026Score37Mixed Progress
Single Source
CoverageRecencyEngagementVelocityBignessConfidenceClipability
Bigness
37
Coverage
13
Recency
90
Engagement
12
Velocity
57
Confidence
18
Clipability
52
Polarization
0
Claims
4
Contradictions
0
Breakthrough
50

Sentiment Mix

Positive0%
Neutral100%
Negative0%

Geography

North America

Expert Signals

CBS News - Top Stories

source2 mentions

AI-Generated Claims

Generated from linked receipts; click sources for full context.

Scammers are using FaceTime to steal bank account passwords.

Supported by 1 story

The scheme begins with fake fraud alerts before shifting to a FaceTime call, where victims are tricked into exposing sensitive banking information.

Supported by 1 story

Scammers are using FaceTime to pose as banks and steal your money.

Supported by 1 story

Consumer advocates say they're tracking a rise in cases where scammers are using FaceTime.

Supported by 1 story

Related Events

Timeline (2 stories)

Receipts (2)

Bias Snapshot

Center
Left 0%Center 100%Right 0%
Blogcbsnews.com7/14/2026
Blogcbsnews.com7/14/2026