Wait before you respond to that WhatsaApp message!

 

WhatsApp impersonation frauds using display picture and name cloning are among the fastest-growing cybercrime tactics in India. These scams succeed because they exploit familiarity, trust, and emotional urgency rather than technical hacking. (Social engineering)

Criminals are not breaking into WhatsApp accounts. They are copying identities. The scam works because the message looks like it is coming from someone the victim already knows.

This video explains exactly how WhatsApp cloning frauds operate, why victims transfer money within minutes, and how criminals exploit social and family trust.

HOW WHATSAPP IMPERSONATION FRAUD WORKS

Fraudsters first collect publicly available information. This includes profile photos, names, family relationships, and communication patterns from WhatsApp display pictures, social media profiles, and group chats.

Using this information, the criminal creates a new WhatsApp account with a different phone number. They copy the victim’s contact’s name and profile picture exactly. To the receiver, the chat appears authentic at first glance.

The criminal then sends an urgent message such as
“I have changed my number.”
“I am in a meeting, need help urgently.”
“My UPI is not working, can you transfer money?”

The message is designed to prevent verification. Victims are told not to call and to act quickly.

WHY PEOPLE FALL FOR THIS SCAM

The scam relies on trust, not technology.
The profile picture matches.
The name matches.
The tone sounds familiar.

Victims assume authenticity because the message appears in a private chat, not a public platform. This false sense of security leads to immediate payment without cross-checking.

Money is usually requested through UPI or bank transfer. Once sent, it is moved instantly through mule accounts.

COMMON TARGETS

Family members
Senior citizens
Office colleagues
Business owners
Domestic help employers

This scam spreads rapidly through family WhatsApp groups and workplace networks.

WHY THIS IS NOT A WHATSAPP HACK

No account takeover occurs.
No OTP is stolen.
No device is compromised.

This is identity impersonation using social engineering. That is why two-step verification alone does not stop it if behaviour is not corrected.

WHAT TO DO IF YOU RECEIVE SUCH A MESSAGE

Do not transfer money based on a text message.
Always verify by calling the person on their old number.
Ask a personal question only the real person can answer.

If money is sent, report immediately on
https://cybercrime.gov.in

Delay reduces recovery chances.

WHY REPORTING IS CRITICAL

Every unreported case allows criminals to reuse the same profile image, name, and script to target dozens of people. Reporting helps freeze accounts and trace transaction chains.

Silence enables scale.

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Stay Aware, Stay Safe.

Jai Hind, Jai Bharat.

 

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ABOUT ‘AKANCHA SRIVASTAVA FOUNDATION’

The Akancha Srivastava Foundation is India’s leading social impact initiative dedicated to advancing cyber safety awareness and education. Established in February 2017, this not-for-profit Section 8 organization is a trusted voice in promoting safe online practices across the nation.

Distinguished Board of Advisors
Guided by an honorary advisory board of esteemed leaders:

  • Former Special DGP RK Vij (Chhattisgarh Police)
  • ADG Navniet Sekera (Uttar Pradesh Police)
  • ADG Krishna Prakash (Maharashtra Police)
  • Dr. Poonam Verma (Principal, SSCBS, Delhi University)

Our Mission

The Foundation is committed to educating, empowering, and building bridges between the public and authorities on critical cyber safety issues. Additionally, we specialize in forensics training for law enforcement, equipping them with the skills needed to tackle cybercrime effectively.