New website aims to educate seniors on avoiding online fraud - Action News
Home WebMail Tuesday, November 26, 2024, 08:46 AM | Calgary | -16.5°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Saskatoon

New website aims to educate seniors on avoiding online fraud

Home Instead Senior Care in Saskatoon has partnered with Public Safety Canada to create a website that seniors can use to learn about staying safe online.

Protect Seniors Online quiz created in response to high rates of seniors falling victim to online scams

A keyboard is shown with the word Scam written where the Return key is.
According to research by Saskatoon's Home Instead Senior Care, nearly two-thirds of Canadian seniors have gotten caught up in an online scam or hack. (CBC)

A senior care organization is trying to help stop Canadian seniors from becoming online fraud statistics.

Home Instead Senior Care in Saskatoon has partnered with Public Safety Canada to create a website that seniors can use to learn about staying safe online, calledProtect Seniors Online.

Greg Charyna, owner of Home Instead Senior Care, said his business's research found that 64 per cent of Canadian seniors have been the victim or target of at least one common online scam or hack.

The most common scams include pop-up requests to fix your computer for a fee, tax scams that appear to come from the Canada Revenue Agency and something called ransomware.

Charyna said with ransomware, software takes over your computer and won't unlock it until you pay up.

Greg Charyna, owner of Home Instead Senior Care in Saskatoon, aims to help seniors stay at home longer by making sure they're staying safe online. (Victoria Dinh/CBC)

"These are the kinds of things that a lot oftrusting peoplewill be encountering and that can really take advantage," Charyna said on CBC Radio's Saskatoon Morning.

For some folks, this is the window to their world.- GregCharyna, Home Instead Senior Care

"We're trusting. We mean well. And sometimes, when we get pushed into a corner, we feel that the only option we have is to respond and give the person what they're asking for."

Falling victim to a scam can cause people to lose their confidence online, and can lead to a loss of feelings of independence,Charynasaid.

"For some folks, this is the window to their world. If they're not able to get out the way they used to, to feel threatened online[is] kind of like you feel concerned about a fall when you're out walking around," Charyna said.

He suggested that seniors start with the quizon the website. It walks people through scenarios and advises whether they could be a scam.

With files from CBC Radio's Saskatoon Morning