Episode 64 Educational

Bonus: Holiday Scams Unwrapped: Tips to Stay Safe this Season

December 2, 2025 | 32:38

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Bonus: Holiday Scams Unwrapped: Tips to Stay Safe this Season

Whether you’re buying gifts, traveling, or just enjoying the holidays with family, these practical tips will help you protect yourself and your loved ones. From AI-powered scams to gift card fraud, tap-to-pay security, and protecting your kids online—we cover the essentials to keep your holiday season safe and secure.

Topics Discussed

  • Holiday Scams
  • AI Voice & Video Cloning
  • Gift Card Fraud
  • EZ-Pass Toll Scams
  • Sexploitation Emails
  • Tap-to-Pay Security
  • Phone Permissions & Malware
  • Subscription Auto-Renewal
  • Credit Card vs Debit Card Safety
📝 Full Episode Transcript

Joe Patti [00:00]: My kids know nothing about technology. They have phones, they use them, they play video games and all, but they do not know how it works, which means they also don’t know about a lot of these scams. So, if you’re giving them this gear and especially if you’re giving them payments, you gotta tell your kids about that stuff.

All right, welcome to the Security Cocktail Hour. I’m Joe Patti.

Adam [00:29]: I’m Santa Claus.

Joe Patti [00:31]: So let’s start with the hot stuff. And we’ve talked about AI a lot on the show and AI scams, but this is when they’re gonna ramp up, don’t you think? We’ve talked a lot about the voice and video cloning.

Which kind of is sort of like the scam you were talking about, but even taking it to the next level of, you know, that’s actually what I was thinking of. Were you going to say that there was like a video of the guy sitting next to him, supposedly calling him and it looked real? That would be crazy.

Adam [01:01]: Yeah, you know what’s funny? I think if I understand correctly, there’s a new malware for your phone. When you go to call out to your bank, it redirects it to a different phone number. I forgot what malware that was, but like you’re calling, I’m calling Chase. And meanwhile, it’s calling the fake Chase. It re-diverts the numbers now.

Joe Patti [01:14]: Really?

That’s terrible. That’s really…

Adam [01:25]: You don’t even know you’re being scammed and you’re being scammed because you’re being scammed.

Joe Patti [01:29]: Well, you don’t even know it and you may be doing the things that we always tell people to do, like call the number on the back of the credit card, don’t click a link or anything. But if they’ve managed to reroute you on your phone, that’s nasty.

Adam [01:42]: So like the old Kevin Mitnick trick, unfortunately Kevin Mitnick passed away, but one of his things was, you know, they send you an email and you or a text, you call the number the text. And then when you call it, it’s actually really calling Chase, but they do a man in the middle attack. So in violation, we found that somebody’s using your credit card illegally. Please call this number. So not every number is visible because some numbers are like the fraud hotline. It might not be the regular Chase number or the regular Citi number. It’s the Chase fraud hotline or Citi hotline. You end up calling it. But what this would do is do a man in the middle attack. As you’re calling, they use an asterisk to grab your digits. So you call, put your account number, you put your PIN number in, whatever you’re doing. And it says, you have $1,537.63 and you’re like, yeah, I really do. Thank God nothing happened. You hang up. Now they got your digits. They call back Chase themselves. And now they’re in your account.

Joe Patti [02:47]: That’s it. Okay, you gotta explain what asterisk is. We don’t mean the little thing on the phone dial.

Adam [02:50]: I’m sorry.

Go ahead, you explain it, you’re better than me.

Joe Patti [02:56]: Okay, asterisk is, I don’t know they still call it a PBX, but it’s open source PBX, which means it’s like a free version of the phone system that you’d have in your office and you can hook it up to the phone network. So, you can have your own office phones or whatever. It’s kind of becoming a little less used than in the past, but you can have that. And so these guys have figured out how to set up the call routing. So when you think you’re calling Chase, but because of the malware in your phone, your phone instead doesn’t call that number, it calls them. And then they connect it from there to the real place you’re trying to get to. It’s called a man in the middle attack. So you think you’re talking to them directly, but you’re not. And like Adam said, then these guys can trick you. They can get your credentials and your information and try to go to the bank themselves. That’s a really nasty trick. So how do we… Well, it’s simple in concept. It’s not simple to execute, but it’s…

Adam [03:46]: But it’s so simple.

Well, not terrible to execute. I mean, I bet you can download a free asterisk appliance already made to do a man in the middle attack if you want to.

Joe Patti [04:02]: Yeah, but you’ve got to get the malware on the phone too.

Adam [04:04]: No, no two different things. So the malware, the malware is embedded in kind of poisoning the well, so you download something that you think is good. Like let’s say you go to download Chat GPT, but you download Chat GPT TT which is somebody else puts it into their store and you’re like, cool, this is real Chat GPT. I’m using it. But meanwhile in the white space or in the space where there’s no code, it’s executing other instructions to say to your phone, like you allow permissions. For anyone who has an Android phone, I don’t know much about iPhone. You say, allow mic, allow access to keypad, allow access to my speaker, allow access to my contacts. Well, when you allow all this access, this malware can do whatever it wants with it. It can listen to you. It can know the GPS if you allow that and everything else. So you gotta be very careful of the permissions. I guess where I’m really getting at is you gotta be careful what you add to your phone because just because it’s something that actually works, it doesn’t mean that there’s nothing nefarious within it as well.

Joe Patti [05:15]: Yeah, that’s very true. And you know, iPhone does very similar things when you get an app and it wants to use the camera, the mic, whatever it asks you the first time. And, you know, we’ll give you the same advice we’ve given people for years on stuff. Don’t just say yes. If it seems like this thing has nothing to do with that, don’t do it. Or even if it is something like you think it’s Chat GPT, it has this really cool voice thing. You know, well, if you’re not planning on using it, just don’t give it access. You can always change it later.

Adam [05:43]: Well, I’m laughing because I remember back in the day before there was a real flashlight function built into the phones, you had to download a flashlight app to turn on the flashlight. Do you remember that on your phone?

The point I’m making that when you downloaded the flashlight app back in the days when it first came out, the flashlight app have access to your GPS? Can the flashlight app have access to your microphone? Can the flashlight app access your contacts? Wait, wait. Why does my flashlight app need access to my contacts? So think about it logically. If you’re downloading something, it’s a recipe program. And it’s saying I want access to your microphone. Think about it logically.

Joe Patti [06:26]: Yeah, that’s right. But you need to be vigilant too because sometimes you will be downloading something and using it where maybe it’s a photo app and so it needs to get access to your camera. It’s like, well, then that’s a little trickier. So be careful what you download. Keep an eye on stuff.

What else do we have?

Adam [06:45]: Well, I was gonna say a lot of people are traveling these days and when you’re traveling you tend to use a lot more tolls. There’s a big thing with EZ-Pass. People are texting you saying you’re in violation you need to fix these tolls really quickly. So be careful. Go into your EZ-Pass app. Don’t click on a link. Most of the time, most people not gonna text you with, have an issue. If you haven’t gotten an EZ-Pass violation text before, you’re probably never gonna get one in your life unless they enhance it. So be very careful.

Joe Patti [07:23]: Yeah, that’s right. If you’ve been on vacation in Europe and EZ-Pass tells you you just got a toll violation, either someone stole your car or it’s a scam, you know? You know, there’s another thing you can do too, because one of the reasons they do stuff like that, it’s like the… No, I’m good, thanks. One of the reasons they do stuff like that is they probably don’t know you have EZ-Pass, but they figure, like in New York, New Jersey, probably on East Coast, virtually everyone does.

Adam [07:37]: Sorry, one more of those.

Spray and pray.

Joe Patti [07:49]: Yeah, spray and pray, they’re just hitting everyone. And at the holidays, those get particularly effective because with the package delivery stuff, because everyone’s getting packages from Amazon or many other places. And so that’s it, they just send it to everyone. You gotta make sure you really look at it and say, is this what I really ordered? Go to the Amazon website.

Please tell your friends and your family the same thing, especially if someone like an older person says, I got this thing from Amazon. Even they ask you, is this real? You know something about security or IT, whatever. Tell them, say, look into it. Don’t accept all that stuff because people just will do it very naturally. And unfortunately, a lot of people, even if they haven’t seen something like that before, they’ll say, this is a great new service, this is wonderful technology, and go for it. They’re not even thinking about whether it’s real or not. So try to help people. We try to be helpful, right, Adam? And encourage others to do the same thing.

Adam [08:54]: Well, so let’s talk about sexploitation. I have a funny feeling that the people that sent out the sexploitation emails, and I’ll explain what that is in a second, they need some money to pay for some of their family’s gifts. So you’re going to see a rise of those again. Sexploitation, for those people who don’t know it, they send you an email saying, hey, if you know this is email, most likely this is how it’s structured. It’s coming from your own account. I’ve hacked your account.

Joe Patti [08:59]: Oh boy.

Adam [09:23]: And I have access to your camera and your microphone. You’ve been very naughty lately. You’ve been doing things you shouldn’t have been. Unless you want your family and your friends to see the pictures of you taking care of yourself, you better send Bitcoin to this address. You have 24 hours to do it or naughty naughty I’m sending your emails to all your family.

Joe Patti [09:44]: Yeah, and it’s fake. You know, we don’t like to say always with stuff, but with these things, you know, 99.999 times it’s fake. And I’ll give you a little tip with that. I mean, you know, people ask me all the time, and I used to joke around and say, well, what have you been looking at? You got anything to worry about? People don’t react to that well.

And it’s probably not very helpful being a wise guy like that. I think it is much better. Yeah, well, that’s it. A lot of people do that. That’s why it works. So even if people are doing something naughty, the odds of it being real are minute.

Adam [10:11]: A lot of people probably do do it so…

So what I do is I cover all my laptop cameras with a slide. It used to be that you had the sticker. I don’t like the stickers, but I put it on top unless I’m using the camera, I cover it up. You know, that gives you a little bit more not perfect confidence that somebody should compromise your computer for some strange reason. Keep in mind, people that are compromising you, it’s either spray and pray or you’re being targeted.

And targeting is another whole world, we’re not going to even go into that. But spray and pray you have to basically run an executable and you have to give a permission and you have to run it. I might say it’s impossible, certainly possible to do, you know, cover your cameras. You never know. Though I’m hearing now this, they call them looters.

The good loaders now is you go to the wrong website by mistake. I think you’re talking about Australian cats or something people with typing looking for Australian something something something and they’re going to this website and this good loader is able to actually run and take passwords off your machine now. That I saw that yesterday. So be careful the websites you go to also. It’s a good loader. I think…

Joe Patti [11:35]: Does that have anything to do with covering your camera or did you just move on? Okay, God. Stream of consciousness, you know?

Adam [11:39]: Moved on I, you know how I am. I’m a little, I so… Yeah, it’s kind of like a lateral movement from one malware to another malware. I apologize. This is just how I am sometimes.

Joe Patti [11:50]: There you go, that’s right, it’s like a lateral movement of hackers what we use to call being scatterbrained. I’m not. No, just kidding. Adam just has so much knowledge he wants to share. We want to get it all out at once.

Adam [11:56]: Well, yeah, well, it’s most likely the second over the first but what I’m getting at is just be careful. Go to the trusted websites and this is why we talk about like, you know zero trust, you know like if we block everything and only allow what’s right, people won’t be doing this, but you’re not gonna have zero trust on your own machines. Too much to manage.

Joe Patti [12:30]: Well, look, zero trust. We’ve talked about it a little bit before. It is kind of a technique or an approach. People differ on what it means, but it basically means you don’t inherently trust something just because something shows up on the network, when it’s a person and they’re coming from somewhere, or seems like they’re using a particular machine. You don’t immediately assume they are who they say they are. And you know what? That’s a very good thing.

To do in your life and encourage other people. Now we’re not saying don’t trust anyone. You have to trust people. But make sure that the person you’re trusting or the entity you’re trusting is who you think it is. That’s what it’s about.

Adam [13:12]: And it’s the same thing with websites. We all only probably go to maybe 100, I’m making this up, but websites, 100 things in our life. We don’t really go more than that. So if you’re trusting only those 100 things then you block everything else, you know, you’re not blocking, you’re allowing only 100 websites and everything else is basically blocked because you’re not allowing it, you won’t get in trouble, but too much work.

Joe Patti [13:38]: Yeah, but that’s hard. You know what’s funny too is when somebody, when you’re doing stuff like that, you’ve got the camera permissions off, the mic permissions off. When it pops up and it says, do you want to do this? We say yes a lot without checking. So we try to encourage people to don’t just click it, check first. Make sure it really is.

Adam [13:40]: It’s 100% hard.

Joe Patti [14:04]: Who you think it is to the best of your ability.

Adam [14:07]: So let’s talk about gift cards now.

Joe Patti [14:10]: Yes, the gift card scam is always a classic and a popular one, so… Go ahead. Let’s roleplay.

Adam [14:15]: I’m gonna roleplay here. Hey, let’s pick somebody. Hey Jason. Do me a favor. This is Adam. I know you’re involved in the whole recruitment business to help us get more followers. We’re looking to give out five gift cards at $50 each. I need you to go to CVS. I’ll pay you when I see you. Go to CVS, pick up five gift cards for $50 each, scratch them off, take pictures of it so I can send it out to the people that won the contest.

Joe Patti [14:48]: That’s right. And then I can be the recipient of it and say, hmm, this guy wants a bunch of money and he’s a friend of mine. And you know what? I snubbed him and didn’t invite him to the holiday party. So I’m feeling guilty. So I’m going to send them the gift cards.

Adam [15:00]: Whoa whoa. You had a holiday party?

Joe Patti [15:03]: Oops. Just kidding. But seriously, what they will prey on is things like friendship, but we’ve talked about it before also. They’ll also prey on, you know, fear, like if it’s your child or a parent or something. And that’s something you really got to talk with your whole family about now is the scam thing that, you know, we talk with Jen Gold about having a code word to make sure, you know, it’s really them. But so that applies to the gift card scam and a lot of other things. And one of the twists on the holiday gift card scam is always going, but during the holidays, people send more gift cards. So you may see more stuff. And also there’s the gift card charity scam that I heard about when someone says, buy a gift card for charity. The charity, that is what they want, do this. This is how we want you to donate to us. I’m not aware, I’m not an expert, but I’m not aware that most charities ask for gift card donations to Amazon or Red Lobster or something or wherever, you know.

Adam [16:02]: How about the one where a woman goes into a store, older woman, more of a senior, she was told that her electricity is being turned off. And if she doesn’t get, if she doesn’t pay for her electricity, which is I say $252, gonna have electricity turned off. She walks into a store, she goes, I need X amount of dollars in gift cards. And then the people behind the counter say, don’t do this. It’s a scam. No, no, no, I don’t want to lose my electricity. The store owner sells a gift card to the person, calls the police. The police show up, one officer shows up says that a woman give me that phone. He goes like this is sergeant blah blah blah. Who are you? No, she had electricity to be turned off. He ends up saving her from giving the gift cards to the person but if somebody’s asking you to pay for something in a form of gift cards, probably not good, you know.

Joe Patti [17:00]: Yeah, that’s right.

Yeah, and you know, the thing that’s really tough about the gift card thing and a lot of other scams is that they do prey on fear, you know, like, we’re going to turn off your electricity or, you know, in a job, it’s your boss and you’re worried you’re going to get fired if you don’t send them this stuff to help them out. You know, during the holidays, though, you know, it’s especially tough, you know, on the elderly.

People who, you know, they’re going to prey on your love of your family, maybe very insecure, the economic times are a little tough. And, you know, it’s really hard to protect against that. You know, probably one of the few ways is to just talk to them about it and just say, hey, you know, be on the lookout for this. Please be careful. Yeah, proactively before. Even if they start to fall for it, least it’s in their head. And then maybe if they do go to the store, when the clerk says, you know, this is probably a scam, they’re going to say, I heard this before from someone I trust, and this is real. You know, it’s really a nasty thing. And try to do what we can. That’s…

Adam [18:11]: So my wife gets WhatsApp message, classic scam. Her husband says, I need you to send money to my son in another country. I’m unable to send the money from this country because they don’t allow us. Classic scam. I said to my wife, have that person come on WhatsApp, turn the camera on. And we all know there’s also deep fakes, but we can kind of vet that out.

Joe Patti [18:39]: Not so prevalent, especially for something spontaneous like that. Right now, it has to be well planned for them to use that kind of stuff.

Adam [18:46]: So my wife has her cousin’s husband get on WhatsApp. I think it’s like four in the morning where they are and he gets on goes, yeah, it’s really me. I really need you to send the money. Western Union does not allow us to send money from this country to this country. It was legitimate. So it wasn’t a scam. It was real, but it seemed so much it was a scam. But the point here, the moral of the story is just vet the person.

Joe Patti [18:58]: Ha!

Well, there’s some crazy countries, but anyway. Well, sometimes it is.

Adam [19:15]: It takes only a couple of minutes sometimes not all the time. Go on WhatsApp, go on camera, call the person the number, you know. If it’s originating from the number, you know, just because it originates from the number, you know, doesn’t mean it’s not a scam. That means somebody could have taken over that account. But have them go on WhatsApp, have them go on video, have them answer a question like where did we go in the summer of 2000? Where did we go in the summer of 1968? That’s when I was about 50 years old but if you can ask a question and get an answer that you think only that person knows, then you’ve vetted the person.

Joe Patti [19:52]: And also see if it makes sense. I mean, that’s a really good thing there because if I got that, 99% of my family is in New Jersey, we’re so worldly. It’s like, if my cousin calls me or something and says, I’m in a country that they don’t accept Western Union from, I’d be really suspicious of that. Like, what the hell are you doing there? But yeah, but it’s real for you, but it wouldn’t be real for me. That’s…

Adam [20:13]: Well, this was real but like his, and that’s the other scam, right?

No, I know but like here’s the other scam, right? All these scams come up during the holidays even though they’re not holiday scams. You know, Joe Jr. got into a car accident and he’s being held by the police and he needs $500 for bail. Go buy 10 gift cards at $50 and send it to this location.

Joe Patti [20:54]: I’ll tell you what I like. I do like the, and I think we’ve talked about this before, maybe I did a short on it, but I like the tap to pay stuff. I love using my phone and not having to take out my wallet, and it is really secure. More so than the old slide things, the skimmer doesn’t work. And I think even if you tap, if the card’s got the chip, which I think most do now, that’s really helpful.

Adam [21:16]: Yeah, we should tip the game on it.

Joe Patti [21:18]: Yeah, it had some cryptography and stuff. But I love the phone. I especially love the phone. Well, it’s not a holiday thing, but I especially love the phone now on the subway. And I think every agency has it now. You probably got your phone out and you’re looking at it anyway, where you just tap the thing. You don’t have to take out your wallet or get your card or do anything like that. That’s cool.

Adam [21:36]: Yeah. Somebody said tap to pay so we can steal your information. Okay, look, you can steal your information so many ways. Yeah, you can scam and take people’s information so many ways. You have to do what’s comfortable for you. I also realized if you have tap to pay and your phone is stolen from you by force and your phone is unlocked they can do whatever they want to do. I get it.

Joe Patti [21:43]: No, it’s better. It’s better than using a credit card number.

Well of course.

Adam [22:03]: I’ve heard all the counter arguments to why they do this and why not to do this. Look, all you have to do is do the best you can to have situational awareness. Keep your phone locked when you can. Force it to lock almost within a minute or two. If somebody steals your phone, you’re still alive, hopefully, right? So you gotta weigh the good and the bad.

Joe Patti [22:26]: Well, you know, it’s all about risk and making decisions, but the thing is now a lot of the newer methods of things like, you know, like the tap to pay like the phones and everything. It really is just as easy or easier than the traditional methods. And, you know, I encourage people to use it. I use it myself. And, you know, I try to encourage my family to. It’s like, I know you got to set it up. And I know it may seem a little daunting and real, but once you get it set up, it’s so easy, you know, it really is, really is easier. And, you know, that’s it.

Adam [23:00]: Well, tap to pay is also good. And I know this is going be an argument too. And someone’s going ask me for their 30 seconds of their life back. You can use tap to pay for your kids. If the kids carry their phone all the time. God forbid they need money for food. Assuming that you can afford it, right? Give your kids access tap to pay. You can watch what they’re buying. And you can also see, you know, if they need something in the sense of urgency, they can do it.

Joe Patti [23:10]: Yeah.

Adam [23:29]: Hopefully they’ll practice health and hygiene with the phone and hopefully they won’t do anything nefarious because most kids really won’t. You teach them right or if they train them, train them is horrible. Teach them right, tap to pay is good.

Joe Patti [23:42]: Well, there is a certain amount of like, you know, you need to teach your kids, but you also need to train them. If you give them something, you should be training them to use it correctly. I mean, you know, we talk a lot about, you know, we often focus on, say about the family, watch out for the elderly, but your kids too. You know, these kids, they’re tech savvy and that they’re, you know, digital natives or whatever they have, you know, they’re used to these phones, they’re used to all these things working. But one of the things that surprised me is that, you know, when Adam and I were kids, if you had all these gadgets and everything, you’re usually pretty tech savvy. And you knew how they worked and you knew something about them. You know, my kids know nothing about technology. They have phones, they use them, they do all this stuff, they play video games and all, but they do not know how it works, which means they also don’t know about a lot of these scams. So, you know, if you’re giving them this gear and especially if you’re giving them payments and I just had to sign my daughter up for something and I said, look, you need to be careful with this. You don’t just give it to anyone. You only give it to reputable places. You call me if you’re not sure. You gotta tell your kids about that stuff too.

Adam [24:52]: Well, like I’ll tell you an example right about two, two, three years ago, my wife went to go buy flowers for somebody and they did it by mistake because they recognized it instead of typing fifty five dollars and fifty one cents I typed five hundred fifty five dollars and fifty one cents. They realized it they canceled it but it takes 24 hours sometimes for it to come off too and that’s the other thing. I personally recommend do not use debit cards most of the time. Use your credit cards and then pay your credit card as soon as you can within 24 hours because this way you have one, you have insurance over the payment that you made is wrong, that the product that you got or service is wrong, you can, you can, you know, dispute it. I also realized people like using debit cards sometimes, cash because debit and cash a lot of times people will not charge you extra fees. Let’s leave it at that. But you know you got to pick what you got to pick your poison. Do you want to not incur the extra fees for using the debit card because some people won’t charge you for the debit or cash or do you want to protect yourself and use the credit card? If you use a debit card and somebody puts the wrong amount in, that money comes out of your account. And then you got to fight it. So if you’re paying mortgage, if by mistake, they were supposed to charge you 500 and they charge you 50,000 and somehow another that went through, which I don’t have 50,000 on my account, by the way, you know, you lost that money until you get it back. You have to dispute it. So you’re going to have to bounce a lot of things for a while.

Joe Patti [26:17]: Yeah, that’s right.

If you can.

Yeah, I mean, I’ve never been a fan of debit cards and I am one of those people who doesn’t like to pay credit card fees, but I do use the debit functionality with these things, but very, very sparingly and only with places that I really know and that are really, you know, so be very careful when using it, please.

Adam [27:01]: Yeah.

And I’m not looking to get into Europe versus America, but a lot of places in Europe, they’ll bring the credit card machine to you. They swipe it right in front of you and you pay it right there. In America, they take your card to the back room or to the register. They have possession of your card. I’ve also been in places even recently where my card disappeared by mistake because they dropped it. And then they had to go look for it and find it. So like, they put it into the folding thing where you had the receipt and you sign it. I’m like, where’s my card? It was there. No, it’s not there. So if you give your debit card disappears, then your money disappears. If your credit card disappears, yeah, it’s a little different now. The money’s got taken out of the account. It’s being added to your amount of credit you owe and they both suck but I rather have the cash still in my account and dispute the credit charged in my account.

Joe Patti [27:38]: I only tend to use my card in bars for some reason. It seems to be a problem there. I don’t know why.

Adam [27:38]: I remember that happened to you. I vaguely remember but the point I’m making is your debit card disappears. Then your money disappears if your credit card disappears. Yeah, it’s a little different now. The money’s got taken out of the account. It’s being added to your amount of credit you owe and they both suck but I rather have the cash still in my account and dispute the credit charged in my account.

Joe Patti [27:49]: Yeah, you got a problem.

Yeah.

Yeah. Other thing too though, Adam, is believe it or not, I know I did a couple of years ago, my first post-COVID trip to Europe, I was stunned and pleased to see how much they were using the little machine that comes to you. I’m seeing that more and more here in the US though. Even small shops, I guess they’re starting to do that in restaurants and things. I think that’s getting better and I would encourage you to, well, you know, they have a choice, the place either uses it or they don’t. But that’s a good thing.

Adam [28:37]: Well, I went to a farmer’s market in Ithaca, New York. My kid goes to school in Ithaca. At a farmer’s market, keep in mind, there’s nothing there. There’s really no electricity. There’s really no anything, no internet, no infrastructure. So what a lot of people are doing these days is they use their phone and they use the square or other types of devices to ring up your stuff right there and then. So there’s an advantage to doing that, but the problem for individuals, problem for restaurants is it’s not really per se networked with their point of sale. However, your phone is your whole entire cash register right there. So these days, a lot of independent people, when they’re doing services, they go right to their phone, right to the square, tap to go and boom, you’re paying the person there.

Joe Patti [29:27]: Adam, I hate to tell you, but that’s really not new. You know, people with cell phones in a little shop or a little kiosk have been doing that for a long time.

Adam [29:31]: No, I know that I’ve had a square for years, but it’s more prevalent now than it was before because I’m seeing it more and more now that people, let me send you an invoice. But now people are literally like I’ve seen it. I haven’t seen it as much in the past as I see it now. People are literally doing this more and more now because all these apps are out there.

Joe Patti [29:56]: I’ll tell you another thing to watch out for over the holidays with your family. That’s not a scam, but it’s kind of a funny story. Subscriptions. Very often you sign up for a subscription at the holidays and you think it’s nice. And it’s always auto renew. And they don’t have someone come and knock on your door at renewal time and say, hey, do you really want to renew it? They make it as subtle as possible and can use what’s called dark patterns and that’s when it’s like really hard to unsubscribe or you got to like call them or do something ridiculous to go. You got to watch out for that. But also watch out for buying things for your family. I’m gonna tell you something funny happened with my dad a couple years ago and Spotify came out, you know, God, I loved it. And we’re not plugging Spotify because we’re on Spotify, we’re on everything else too.

I get the Spotify thing and then I realize, I’m like, it has virtually everything. And I’m like, my dad likes all this old stuff like Sinatra, big bands and all these things. I said, he’d probably like Spotify. So I get him a Spotify account. Not realizing at the time, probably not very intelligently, that I was gonna be paying for it for the rest of my life because it ends up, he loves it. He says all the time, this is the best Christmas gift I ever got. And it’s the gift that keeps on giving. That’s the greatest of all that keeps on coming. But it’s for my dad, doesn’t matter. That’s fine. Watch out for that stuff.

Adam [31:16]: It’s a bill that keeps on billing.

Well, that’s what you should tell your dad. Guess what? Guess what I got you for Christmas. A Spotify subscription again.

Joe Patti [31:32]: You know what? I should remind him every year, like put a little card or something like it. I’ll get some points for that. That’d be funny.

Adam [31:38]: Yeah.

Joe Patti [31:41]: All right. Well, Adam, I think we’re kind of getting to last call or at least my official security cocktail hour coffee mug is empty.

Final thoughts?

Adam [31:52]: Yes, be careful. Maintain situational awareness. Don’t let people get near you because, you know, people will try to pickpocket you and take your card and take your access. And that’s really it. Have a safe and joyful holidays.

Joe Patti [32:07]: Be careful, enjoy the holidays, enjoy it with your family and try to encourage your family to do the same. All right, Adam, this is always fun.

Adam [32:17]: Yeah, hold on a second, let me go close my windows, it’s really cold out.

Joe Patti [32:21]: That’s right. I’m going to go out and shovel some snow. Yeah, there we go. All right. Take it easy, everyone. Happy holidays.

Adam [32:24]: Me too.

Bye bye.

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