An estimated 16% of social media profiles are fake — roughly 750 million accounts. They serve bot armies, romance scams, impersonation fraud, and phishing campaigns.
Someone online making you uneasy? Describe the interaction at IsThisAScam.to for an instant red-flag analysis.
Check 1: Profile Photo
- Reverse image search on Google Images, TinEye, or Yandex (full guide)
- AI-generated faces: Look for asymmetric earrings, blurry backgrounds, hair merging into background, inconsistent lighting
- Single photo: Real people post multiple photos in different settings
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Check 2: Account Age and History
New accounts reaching out immediately are disproportionately fake. Dormant accounts suddenly active may have been purchased. Bot posting patterns are mechanically regular.
Check 3: Friends and Followers
Following 5,000 with 23 followers = spam bot. Zero mutual connections in your industry = suspicious. Friends that are mostly other suspicious profiles = bot network.
Check 4: Content
Generic motivational quotes, no tags from others, engagement mismatches (50K followers, 3 likes), and language inconsistencies all point to fakes.
Check 5: Behavioral Red Flags
- Quick escalation ("I love you" in days)
- Avoids video calls
- Hard luck stories (deployed soldier, sick family member)
- Eventually asks for money
Platform-Specific Tips
- Facebook: Check timeline history and Life Events
- Instagram: Examine followers list quality. Use Social Blade.
- LinkedIn: Verify claimed employment against company's employee list
- Dating Apps: Only professional photos, reluctance to meet, conversations move quickly to WhatsApp
The Romance Scam Pipeline
- Flattering first contact
- Weeks of emotional bonding
- Sudden crisis requiring money
- Payment via wire, crypto, or gift cards
- New emergencies until victim stops paying
The FBI reported $1.14 billion in romance fraud in 2025. IsThisAScam's 6-layer detection analyzes messages against known romance scam patterns. See email verification and scam psychology.
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