Online dating could be a daydream or a nightmare for an individual depending on the experience and exposure one comes across. Along with several other ways to try luck in romance, online finding your date is one of the most convenient and approachable courses of action. An online dating platform is considered to be a prestigious way to find a soul mate or a life partner. 

In online dating apps or websites, initially, people build their profiles – adding their pictures, brief overviews about themselves, their interests, skills, and jobs –  through which the perfect match is found and created. Throughout the entire process, there are numerous traps laid for people to get stuck into and never come out of. Never coming out is controversial as people technically are stuck in the trap or involved in a relationship do come out of it as it ends. 

However, emotional and psychological damage do affect an individual’s future relations, emotional stability, and the decisions they take for the rest of their life. Although every single thing in this world has some cost, however, if the cost is peace of mind and comfort, then it is indeed extremely expensive.  

Is This Love or A Scam? 

The basic purpose of The Claimers website is to educate the audience regarding different genres of frauds and traps laid by people for their customers – the people they ill-treat to obtain profit from. The scammers have no other purpose except greediness and selfishness. The real question is how do we know that we are dealing with someone who will inflict an injury on us or is wearing a mask of authenticity.

The following could be the questions one should be curious to know about the person he/she meets.

When are we meeting?

The relationship or bounding starts online, however, people meet later after a couple of days, weeks or months. In the case of a scammer, the possibility of a meeting fades away each time it is planned, so he has a chance to hide his reality, especially when the deceiver is using a fake picture to attract the victim. In the modern world of technology, it is a piece of cake for the scammer to photoshop the picture or pretend to be someone else.  

Is my privacy being invaded or shared?

The scammer begins by building trust, leading to manipulating an individual who has fallen for them in the future, so they can use their innocence to accomplish their purpose. There is a thin line between one’s privacy being invaded and being shared. The only thing which differentiates the two concepts is willingness. When being invaded, the scammer compels the victim to share his/her social media passcode, asking victims to report each action they perform, further restricting them from meeting the people, which might even include family and friends. Thus, the negative domination corners the sufferer. 

The willingness, however, is when the fallen individual, under no pressure, and out of free will, shares personal space and security codes with another person.

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JS Bin