Become a fan of Slashdot on Facebook

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Privacy Security The Almighty Buck

Millennials More Likely To Fall For Scams Than Baby Boomers (washingtonexaminer.com) 293

A new report from the Better Business Bureau suggests that millennials are now more likely to fall victim to a scam than Baby Boomers. Washington Examiner reports: The Better Business Bureau reports that 69 percent of scam victims are under the age of 45. Young adults heading off to college are especially gullible, the group says. "College students can be easy targets for scammers and identity thieves. They are old enough to have money, young enough to be vulnerable and are likely unsupervised as many are away from home for the first time," writes Heather Massey of the Better Business Bureau. Phishing scams now target cell phones as well as email and social media.

"Millennials spend a lot of time on Facebook or other social media sites, where they can target them with these messages," said Jim Hegarty, Better Business Bureau president and CEO. College students also use sensitive information frequently, like student IDs, Social Security numbers, and banking information.

This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Millennials More Likely To Fall For Scams Than Baby Boomers

Comments Filter:
  • by plopez ( 54068 ) on Tuesday September 25, 2018 @08:34PM (#57376624) Journal

    Sheep to the slaughter.

    • Re:A trusting bunch (Score:5, Informative)

      by ShanghaiBill ( 739463 ) on Tuesday September 25, 2018 @09:24PM (#57376806)

      There is nothing new about this. I was in Berkeley in the early 1980s, back when the new freshmen were still boomers. In September, the panhandlers and scammers would be lined up along Telegraph Avenue. By October, the students would be jaded and cynical.

  • by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Tuesday September 25, 2018 @08:34PM (#57376626)
    It's right there in TFS. They use the internet more and so the ones likely to fall for scams are easier to reach. It's harder to get to boomers since they're not very connected. This'll change out to older folks getting scammed more once the generation that grew up with the Internet ages a bit.
  • Comment removed (Score:5, Interesting)

    by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Tuesday September 25, 2018 @08:47PM (#57376692)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • Re:Sheltered (Score:5, Insightful)

      by jwhyche ( 6192 ) on Tuesday September 25, 2018 @09:02PM (#57376756) Homepage

      This is something that I have also observed with a lot of millennials. Most of them have the works they way they think it should, and now how it actually works. In the ideal millennial world you should be able to walk down the street naked at 2 am. They just don't take in to account there are fucking evil people out there that will happily take advantage of them.

      It is not that millennials are stupid, it just they are not getting the same life experiences any more that most of us non-milennials got.

      • In the ideal millennial world you should be able to walk down the street naked at 2 am.

        "The world should be my safe space." -- woke millennials.

        Yeah, good luck with that. Come back when you're a little more worldly and educiatized.

      • by gweihir ( 88907 )

        It is not that millennials are stupid, it just they are not getting the same life experiences any more that most of us non-milennials got.

        They are getting it. But far too late, when the harm is a lot larger than what it would have been at the age they should have been getting it. Stupid. Protecting your children like that harms them.

        • Well, experience is information you get after you needed it.

        • by Zocalo ( 252965 )
          So much this. This is just another part of what happens when parents wrap their precious snowflakes up in cotton wool and bubblewrap and only allow them to frequent "safe spaces" instead of letting them start to figure things out for themselves, including all the accompanying cuts and bruises to body and ego, and building up their self-confidence and life skills in a controlled manner. No matter how much we'd prefer it to be otherwise, life can - and does - suck from time to time, and other people can be
      • As someone who never locks my front door, whose girlfriend walks home just fine at 3am through an unlit park, maybe the fact that millennials are not getting the "experiences" you got is because the world around you has improved.

      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

        The same is said of every generation. Were hippies and flower power any less ridiculed?

        Young people, by virtue of having been alive for less time, are less experienced. Some would say less cynical and worn down. It will always be that way.

        • by jwhyche ( 6192 )

          The same is said of every generation. Were hippies and flower power any less ridiculed? Young people, by virtue of having been alive for less time, are less experienced. Some would say less cynical and worn down. It will always be that way.

          Not like this generation. Hippies, despite all the shit I give them, had enough basic life skills when they started out. When I came out of high school, at the age of 18, I knew how to create a budget, balance a checkbook, type, cook a basic meal, buy and maintain a car, look for, apply for, and get a job. Any many other basic skills.

          I've met Millennials, in college, that can't even do basic math with out a calculator. I'm not talking algebra here, but addition and subtraction. Some of them are almo

          • Re:Sheltered (Score:5, Insightful)

            by jeff4747 ( 256583 ) on Wednesday September 26, 2018 @10:57AM (#57379478)

            Not like this generation. Hippies, despite all the shit I give them, had enough basic life skills when they started out. When I came out of high school, at the age of 18, I knew how to create a budget, balance a checkbook, type, cook a basic meal, buy and maintain a car, look for, apply for, and get a job. Any many other basic skills.

            And then your generation voted to gut school funding and tie it to standardized tests that do not involve any "basic life skills". And you are apparently surprised by the results of your votes.

            • by jwhyche ( 6192 )

              Not exactly surprised. I remember when we started down this path when I was first enrolling my kids in school. I looked over the curriculum and recall that I didn't see any of the stuff I had in school. I seem to recall teachers saying that the new stuff would lead to a generation not being prepared.

              Of course this didn't stop Bush Beta and his band of merry idiots from rubber stamping it. Then it got worse under Obama. Now we have a willy wonka escapee at the helm and I don't see anything getting b

      • by h4x0t ( 1245872 )
        You folks need to understand what the word 'should' means.
        Just because one says they should be able to do something (given a series of ideals), does not fucking mean they do it daily and fail to understand the consequences or drivers.
    • you could send your daughter down the street naked with a ¥10,000 yen bill taped to her and expect her to be fine. Jokes aside the reason they have so many vending machines is they don't have much vandalism. Europe's generally a lot better than the US in that regard. And people crack jokes about how nice and polite Canada is.

      I guess what I'm saying is that the US seems to have a reputation for being a nasty place. That said, crime's been dropping non-stop for decades. What hasn't been dropping is pol
      • by mentil ( 1748130 )

        Even if crime's dropping, that doesn't mean there are fewer assholes. Furthermore, an easy way to get crime to seem to drop is to discourage reporting, e.g. "don't bother reporting if your smartphone was stolen". Distrust of police also leads to fewer police reports.

    • Re:Sheltered (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Actually, I do RTFA ( 1058596 ) on Tuesday September 25, 2018 @11:53PM (#57377218)

      You should be able to leave your apartment unlocked/walk down the street naked and not have an issue. You of course won't. But that doesn't excuse the actual people who take advantage of them.

      And, year-by-year, we get closer to that ideal world. So, you know, it's improving.

    • by AvitarX ( 172628 )

      So you believe that one should be attacked for walking down the street naked ?

      Obviously it's not safe behavior, bit why do you think it shouldn't be?

    • Millennials are also the first generation where bullshit like "I should be able to walk down the street naked and have nothing happen to me" is considered neither a joke nor a statement of "why yes, I am bat shit crazy, just wanted to get that out there while breaking the ice."

      I live in the middle of a big city and I do feel this way. But of course the fact that I am bigger than most people out there and am usually walking down the street with a 90 pound dog probably help me feel like I am not going to get hassled. But it's not something I would recommend to any of my friends or family.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      Reminds me of Star Trek, particular Next Generation. Obviously the product of the boomer generation, and they had entire planets where people could walk around practically naked (it was TV after all) without worry. Seems like an admirable goal really, a society with that little crime.

      The whole Federation was pretty much that way.

    • by mjwx ( 966435 )

      Millennials are also the first generation where bullshit like "I should be able to walk down the street naked and have nothing happen to me" is considered neither a joke nor a statement of "why yes, I am bat shit crazy, just wanted to get that out there while breaking the ice." Or girls just leaving their apartments unlocked and then wondering why they had problems with creeps.

      No, they aren't. Young people being a bit naive is nothing new... The fact is young people just lack the experience we take for granted. I'm a gen-xer... Which makes me older than you. You were once the naive young fool you think all young people people are.

      Wisdom comes with age and experience, your kind of thinking is when you gain years, but retard experience.

      Of all your examples, there were young people of my generation doing it, there were young people of my parents generation... Remember the 60'

    • Hopefully this conversation stays in these bounds. But I really like how Jordan Peterson puts it in his Maps of Meaning Havard lectures. I'll paraphrase it.

      "Your culture protects you and allows you to operate within those bounds. Remove the protections of that culture, and you don't know who you'd be"

      I grew up in Africa. I'm of Indian background. Life was far more dangerous. I wasn't protected. I did ignore/not help someone who looked injured on the side of the road. It could be a scam to rob/hurt me. I did

    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • by Kargan ( 250092 ) on Tuesday September 25, 2018 @08:54PM (#57376726) Homepage

    ...are not millennials.

    They are Generation Z-ers.

    https://www.cnbc.com/2018/05/0... [cnbc.com]

  • by Spy Handler ( 822350 ) on Tuesday September 25, 2018 @08:57PM (#57376742) Homepage Journal

    no surprise, given how public schools these days do little besides indoctrinate kids in leftist ideology. Chairman Mao would feel right at home.

  • WTF?!?!? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by sootman ( 158191 ) on Tuesday September 25, 2018 @10:09PM (#57376960) Homepage Journal

    Seriously? Comparing millennials (born mid-80s to early-90s, currently around 20-30 years old) to boomers (born mid-40s to ~1960, currently in their 60s and 70s)? They're more likely to fall for scams BECAUSE THEY'RE YOUNGER AND HAVE LESS EXPERIENCE. There may be more vectors for them to be scammed these days, but I don't think they're any more or less gullible than boomers were *at that same age*.

    Also, didn't slashdot used to warn us about (or better yet, not link to) sites with autoplaying video?

    • ... boomers (born mid-40s to ~1960, currently in their 60s and 70s) ...

      Growing up as a Boomer, we were taught that it ran from 1946 to 1964. The peak year for births in the baby boom was 1961, with second place going to 1960.

      I notice that Wikipedia redefines it using births per 1000, which seems a bit problematic when you’re introducing a large number of babies during a relatively short time - so the population is skewing younger fairly rapidly over the hat period.

    • Seriously? Comparing millennials (born mid-80s to early-90s, currently around 20-30 years old) to boomers (born mid-40s to ~1960, currently in their 60s and 70s)? They're more likely to fall for scams BECAUSE THEY'RE YOUNGER AND HAVE LESS EXPERIENCE. There may be more vectors for them to be scammed these days, but I don't think they're any more or less gullible than boomers were *at that same age*.

      Also, didn't slashdot used to warn us about (or better yet, not link to) sites with autoplaying video?

      It's actually interesting because the current cultural idea is that it's mainly the oldsters falling for scams, and that the youngsters are so much more sophisticated, etc.

    • The article also starts Millennials at 1973, resulting in an even more lopsided grouping of people.....and apparent GenX doesn't exist again.

  • We don't have any money anyway
  • I've protected myself in a thick scratchy blanket of cynicism.

  • by Tony Isaac ( 1301187 ) on Tuesday September 25, 2018 @11:46PM (#57377206) Homepage

    So the school of hard knocks teaches life skills? Wow!

    When Baby Boomers were young, they were stupid too.

  • I buy it

  • Without fail, when I meet such a special snowflake millennial (they're not all like that, by far not, mind you), you will soon after meet their helicopter parents. Who keep these kids under a cheese cover 'til they're 18, and usually much longer than that, keeping reality away from them while reinforcing their belief that they are god's gift to the world.

    What else do you expect to come out of that as soon as these completely unprepared people are dropped into reality?

  • Many fell for a scam before they went. Taking a loan to get a degree in some subject that won't add in any way to either their earnings potential or enjoyment of their work.
  • To think we're special and that we'll get ours eventually without putting in half the work our parents did. It's not a wonder that when "Too good to be true" things come our way that most tend to jump on them.

  • People are stupid. Film at 11
  • I find these claims spurious. One need only look at population statistics to see that in 2010 the percentage of the population that was under age 45 was about 66%. https://www.census.gov/prod/ce... [census.gov] Since the boomers have been dying off, that has more than likely approached the 69% figure in the paper over the past 8 years. Nowhere in the article do they reference the current population distribution. So 69% of the population is under 45 and 69% of scam victims are under 45. To me that says you can't us
  • I have had no less then a dozen calls in the last month from boomers who let someone access their desktop and locked it demanding money to unlock it. I arrived at one location where the scam was still ongoing. I promptly unplugged the ethernet on the computer and when the guy on the other end said I lost connection the lady made me reconnect and wouldn't listen to my explanation that she was going to get ripped off. I left and two days later she calls in to complain that her computer needed a password a

  • 69% of victims are under 45? Just wait for my research that shows the amazing blessings of high age in avoiding email scams - less than 1% of victims are over 90!
  • What about when Baby Boomers were the age of current Millennials? I know I fell for a credit related scam when I was in college 20+ years ago. Did credit cards even exist when Baby Boomers were that age?

  • This article links to an info graphic.
    The info graphic just says that '69% of victims are under 45'. 58% of people in the US are under 45, so one could construe this to mean that millennials are gullible, but that is a stretch. 'Millennials' are a subset of people under 45. Babies are under 45 and they are gullible as fuck. No attempt was made to assess how many scams are encountered, nor the rate at which they are rebuffed, let alone any attempt to show some kind of apples to apples scam comparison.
  • The 20-40 somethings I run into can't keep their heads out of their phones for 30 seconds. Heck, you go into a convenience store, fast food restaurant, or multiple other businesses when it isn't super busy, you have to wait for them to put down the phone, before they will wait on you. Not only that, a LOT of them I run into on a high school or college campus, can't speak in clear English, without contractions, or slang. I won't even get into asking them questions about math, history and the like, or writing

The unfacts, did we have them, are too imprecisely few to warrant our certitude.

Working...