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If you are planning to air through the security of the airport using TSA Precheck, then you should first check the URL. The TSA only posted an immediate warning on Facebook, reminding passengers that they use only the official government site while signing up for prechec.
The Post says, “Sign up for TSA Prechec? Make sure you are using a safe and reliable .Gov website” and this official link, tsa.gov/precheck.
Why warning? Because scammers are out of full force, the busy travelers expect to hand over personal information to the busy passengers and even present the money as TSA Prechec.
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Social Security Administration Fishing Scam Target Retired
A TSA agent at an airport screening (TSA)
Scam
Scammers have created fake emails and websites that look exactly like TSA Prechec. They send these fishing emails to those who are eager to release the airport security lines. The message urges you to click on a link, enroll fast and pay the fee.
What is Artificial Intelligence (AI)?
But here is the problem. You are not signed up for anything valid. You are giving your data to a scammer, and possibly your credit card. Worse than that, you cannot know that unless you stand at the airport, expect a smooth journey that never comes.
TSA Prechec and TSA Prechec Touchless ID depiction (TSA)
How to protect yourself from TSA Prechec Scam
The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) also issued a warning to the passengers to help the scam before too long. Here are the major steps to stay safe and our recommendations.
1. Use only the official site
Always start your application on tsa.gov/Precheck. Type the URL directly into your browser. Never rely on the link from unexpected email or text.
2. Do not click on unexpected links, even if they look real and use strong antivirus software
Avoid clicking on the link in emails or texts, which you were not expecting, even if they look polished and professional. Scammers are getting better in implementing reliable sources. A strong antivirus can mark the fishing email and block malicious websites before clicking. This is an essential line of defense, especially when scammers are deteriorating reliable organizations such as TSA.
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3. Do not pay online if this is your first time
If it is applying for your first time, you pay the fee in the person at the TSA enrollment center. Any person asking you to pay online for the first time is a scammer. Comment: TSA will not reimburse the applicants who try to enroll in TSA Prechec through a fraud website.
4. Slow and think
Scammers often make you quickly. If someone pressures you to pay quickly or click now, walk away.
5. Use a personal data removal service
Personal data removal services can help remove your personal information from data broker sites. This reduces the possibility of scammers targeting you in the first place. While no service promises to remove all your data from the Internet, if you want to continuously monitor and automate the process of removing your information from hundreds of sites continuously over a long period, a removal service is very good.
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6. Enable multi-factor authentication (MFA)
Use MFA for any account related to your travel plans, such as your email, airline app or identity verification services. If scammers get access, MFA adds an additional layer of security.
7. Check for https and a. Gov domain
Before entering any personal details, make sure that the site starts with “https: //” and ends with “.Gov” -Not “.com” or “.org”. Safe and official sites matter.
8. Report suspicious activity immediately
If something is felt, report to report it. Even if you are uncertain, your report can help stop the next scam.
TSA prehechak website depiction (TSA)
What does it mean to you
Getting TSA Precheck should make the journey easier, but only when you do it correctly. The actual process is simple, but scammers are exploiting the urgency of people. This is why it is necessary to slow down, re -burning the link and start on the official government site. Memorization:
- For the first time applicants never pay online.
- Renewal is possible online, but always starts on tsa.gov.
- Any site that ends in “.com” or looks informal is a red flag.
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Kurt’s major takeaways
No one enjoys long TSA lines. Precheck is a valuable tool, but only when you protect yourself from scammers as TSA. Official government site is your safest bet. Be cautious Bookmark tsa.gov/Precheck. Share it with a friend who is traveling soon.
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