Arthur Ward
Education
Practical guides on how scams work, and real scam emails from the honeypot inbox — annotated so you know exactly what to look for.
Know what to look for
Guides & Tips
What scammers do, and how to stop them doing it to you. Tap each card to see what to do.
Tax scam
HMRC will never call you out of the blue demanding payment.
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What to do
Hang up. HMRC contacts you by post first. If you're worried, call them back on 0300 200 3300 — find that number yourself, not from the call.
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Banking scam
No bank will ever ask you to move money to a “safe account.”
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What to do
Hang up. Call your bank on the number on the back of your card. A real bank never asks you to move your own money to protect it. Always a scam.
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Social engineering
If they’re rushing you, that’s the warning sign.
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What to do
Slow down. Call someone you trust. The real thing will still be there in an hour. Urgency is a scammer’s tool — scams don’t survive the pause.
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Phishing email
Don’t click the link. Type the address yourself.
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What to do
Open a new tab and type the company’s address. Links go where the sender tells them, not where they look. Hover first — if the URL looks wrong, it is.
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Investment scam
Guaranteed returns and zero risk don’t exist.
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What to do
Every real investment carries risk. Check the FCA Register at register.fca.org.uk. If the firm isn’t listed, walk away — no exceptions.
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Delivery scam
That “missed parcel” text asking for a small fee? It’s fake.
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What to do
Royal Mail, DPD, and Evri don’t charge redelivery fees by text link. Track your parcel on the courier’s site using the reference from the retailer.
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More cards coming — romance scams, impersonation, courier fraud, and more.
From the honeypot inbox
Real Examples
Actual scam emails — every red flag explained so you know exactly what to look for.
Phishing email
Impersonates: Cloud Storage (generic ΓÇö no brand named)
7 red flags
·
May 2026
Phishing email
Impersonates: Cloud Storage (generic ΓÇö no brand named)
8 red flags
·
Apr 2026