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🚨 Scam Alert – How presence of mind saved ₹3.5 Lakhs! 🚨

zoro

TF Premier
VIP Lounge
I saw a LinkedIn post recently shared a shocking experience that’s worth everyone’s attention.

They received an annual fee charge on their SBI Credit Card, even though it was supposed to be a lifetime free card. After failing to reach SBI customer care, they reached out to the official handle on Twitter. Immediately after sharing their number via DM, they got a call that appeared legitimate.

The caller:
  • Claimed to be from SBI
  • Asked if they had ICICI netbanking
  • Requested them to download the iMobile app for charge reversal via eNACH
  • Gave a professional-looking website link: crcf.bank.sbi (appeared more authentic than the real SBI site!)
  • Asked them to register using their card’s last 4 digits as PIN
⚠️ This was the red flag. The scammer was actually trying to trick them into approving fraudulent transactions via eNACH/Cardless Cash Withdrawal.

When they re-verified with SBI on X, the bank confirmed the site was not legitimate.

👉 The key takeaway:
  • Never trust unsolicited calls, even if they sound professional.
  • Don’t share banking details or approve eNACH/Cardless Cash Withdrawal on someone’s instructions.
  • Always confirm official websites from your bank’s homepage directly, not through search or third-party blogs.

💡 Fun fact: Some blogs (like this one: mywestbengal.com/sbi-complaint-portal) even claim such sites are official. In reality, they’re part of the scam ecosystem.


Stay alert, verify twice, and don’t let scammers win.


📌 Full credit to the original sharer of this experience on LinkedIn
 
  • Gave a professional-looking website link: crcf.bank.sbi (appeared more authentic than the real SBI site!)
  • Asked them to register using their card’s last 4 digits as PIN
That website is totally genuine. Its the portal to register a complaint.

Dot SBI (.sbi) is a Top Level Domain (TLD) managed by SBI itself. No one else can make a website ending with .sbi without the permission of SBI managment.

That Linkedin post is totally about engagement farming do not trust it.
 
Dot SBI (.sbi) is a Top Level Domain (TLD) managed by SBI itself. No one else can make a website ending with .sbi without the permission of SBI managment.
After reading OPs post i thought they somehow got a domain under sbi's tld and it was concerning, looked one comment down and found out that's not the case
 
I saw a LinkedIn post recently shared a shocking experience that’s worth everyone’s attention.

They received an annual fee charge on their SBI Credit Card, even though it was supposed to be a lifetime free card. After failing to reach SBI customer care, they reached out to the official handle on Twitter. Immediately after sharing their number via DM, they got a call that appeared legitimate.

The caller:
  • Claimed to be from SBI
  • Asked if they had ICICI netbanking
  • Requested them to download the iMobile app for charge reversal via eNACH
  • Gave a professional-looking website link: crcf.bank.sbi (appeared more authentic than the real SBI site!)
  • Asked them to register using their card’s last 4 digits as PIN
⚠️ This was the red flag. The scammer was actually trying to trick them into approving fraudulent transactions via eNACH/Cardless Cash Withdrawal.

When they re-verified with SBI on X, the bank confirmed the site was not legitimate.

👉 The key takeaway:
  • Never trust unsolicited calls, even if they sound professional.
  • Don’t share banking details or approve eNACH/Cardless Cash Withdrawal on someone’s instructions.
  • Always confirm official websites from your bank’s homepage directly, not through search or third-party blogs.

💡 Fun fact: Some blogs (like this one: mywestbengal.com/sbi-complaint-portal) even claim such sites are official. In reality, they’re part of the scam ecosystem.


Stay alert, verify twice, and don’t let scammers win.


📌 Full credit to the original sharer of this experience on LinkedIn
images (45).webp
Not everything on LinkedIn is legitimate 😂🙂
 
I saw a LinkedIn post recently shared a shocking experience that’s worth everyone’s attention.

They received an annual fee charge on their SBI Credit Card, even though it was supposed to be a lifetime free card. After failing to reach SBI customer care, they reached out to the official handle on Twitter. Immediately after sharing their number via DM, they got a call that appeared legitimate.

The caller:
  • Claimed to be from SBI
  • Asked if they had ICICI netbanking
  • Requested them to download the iMobile app for charge reversal via eNACH
  • Gave a professional-looking website link: crcf.bank.sbi (appeared more authentic than the real SBI site!)
  • Asked them to register using their card’s last 4 digits as PIN
⚠️ This was the red flag. The scammer was actually trying to trick them into approving fraudulent transactions via eNACH/Cardless Cash Withdrawal.

When they re-verified with SBI on X, the bank confirmed the site was not legitimate.

👉 The key takeaway:
  • Never trust unsolicited calls, even if they sound professional.
  • Don’t share banking details or approve eNACH/Cardless Cash Withdrawal on someone’s instructions.
  • Always confirm official websites from your bank’s homepage directly, not through search or third-party blogs.

💡 Fun fact: Some blogs (like this one: mywestbengal.com/sbi-complaint-portal) even claim such sites are official. In reality, they’re part of the scam ecosystem.


Stay alert, verify twice, and don’t let scammers win.


📌 Full credit to the original sharer of this experience on LinkedIn

are-you-comedy-me.webp
 
I saw a LinkedIn post recently shared a shocking experience that’s worth everyone’s attention.

They received an annual fee charge on their SBI Credit Card, even though it was supposed to be a lifetime free card. After failing to reach SBI customer care, they reached out to the official handle on Twitter. Immediately after sharing their number via DM, they got a call that appeared legitimate.

The caller:
  • Claimed to be from SBI
  • Asked if they had ICICI netbanking
  • Requested them to download the iMobile app for charge reversal via eNACH
  • Gave a professional-looking website link: crcf.bank.sbi (appeared more authentic than the real SBI site!)
  • Asked them to register using their card’s last 4 digits as PIN
⚠️ This was the red flag. The scammer was actually trying to trick them into approving fraudulent transactions via eNACH/Cardless Cash Withdrawal.

When they re-verified with SBI on X, the bank confirmed the site was not legitimate.

👉 The key takeaway:
  • Never trust unsolicited calls, even if they sound professional.
  • Don’t share banking details or approve eNACH/Cardless Cash Withdrawal on someone’s instructions.
  • Always confirm official websites from your bank’s homepage directly, not through search or third-party blogs.

💡 Fun fact: Some blogs (like this one: mywestbengal.com/sbi-complaint-portal) even claim such sites are official. In reality, they’re part of the scam ecosystem.


Stay alert, verify twice, and don’t let scammers win.


📌 Full credit to the original sharer of this experience on LinkedIn
Post karne se pehle thora fact cheking khud vi karliya karo!!!
 
The caller:
  • Claimed to be from SBI
  • Asked if they had ICICI netbanking
  • Requested them to download the iMobile app for charge reversal via eNACH
  • Gave a professional-looking website link: crcf.bank.sbi (appeared more authentic than the real SBI site!)
  • Asked them to register using their card’s last 4 digits as PIN
⚠️ This was the red flag. The scammer was actually trying to trick them into approving fraudulent transactions via eNACH/Cardless Cash Withdrawal.

When they re-verified with SBI on X, the bank confirmed the site was not legitimate.

👉 The key takeaway:
  • Never trust unsolicited calls, even if they sound professional.
  • Don’t share banking details or approve eNACH/Cardless Cash Withdrawal on someone’s instructions.
  • Always confirm official websites from your bank’s homepage directly, not through search or third-party blogs.

💡 Fun fact: Some blogs (like this one: mywestbengal.com/sbi-complaint-portal) even claim such sites are official. In reality, they’re part of the scam ecosystem.


Stay alert, verify twice, and don’t let scammers win.


📌 Full credit to the original sharer of this experience on LinkedIn
Interesting...
2nd step 🪜 , itself Triggered fake alert, why SBI Card take interest if I have ICICI or not !!?
 
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