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Claim That Any Phone Can Be Tracked via Google Maps by Email Is False

A viral claim suggesting that anyone can locate a mobile phone simply by emailing Google and using a phone number is inaccurate and misleading, cybersecurity experts say.

Posts circulating online allege that sending an email through Gmail to a specific address can trigger Google Maps to reveal a device’s location, even without internet access. Google does not offer any such service, and there is no official mechanism that allows location tracking of a phone solely via an email request or partial phone number.

Legitimate phone-tracking tools require explicit user consent and account access, such as Google’s “Find My Device” for Android or Apple’s “Find My” for iPhone. These services work only when users are logged in and have location sharing enabled.

Security specialists warn that messages promoting email-based tracking may be linked to scams or data-harvesting attempts. Users who follow such instructions could expose personal information without gaining any real tracking capability.

Authorities and privacy advocates stress that tracking a phone without permission is illegal in many countries. Users are advised to rely only on official tools provided by device makers and to report misleading claims that promise effortless or universal phone tracking.

Report Claims Meta Earned $16 Billion in 2024 from Fraudulent Ads on Facebook and Instagram

Meta Reportedly Made Billions from Fraudulent Ads Across Facebook and Instagram in 2024

A new report has alleged that Meta Platforms — the parent company of Facebook, Instagram, and WhatsApp — earned a significant portion of its 2024 revenue from fraudulent and prohibited advertisements. According to internal projections, about 10.1 percent of Meta’s total revenue for the year reportedly came from ads linked to scams and banned goods. The findings suggest that certain internal practices and oversight failures allowed these fraudulent ads to remain active on its platforms, despite clear violations of company policy and advertising regulations.

Citing internal company documents, Reuters reported that Meta failed to effectively detect or block deceptive advertising for a range of illegal or misleading products and services. These included fake e-commerce listings, fraudulent investment schemes, unlicensed online casinos, and even banned medical products. The issue reportedly persisted for at least three years across Meta’s major apps — Facebook, Instagram, and WhatsApp — raising concerns about the company’s ad moderation and accountability practices.

The internal projections also claimed that around $16 billion (approximately ₹1.41 lakh crore) of Meta’s total 2024 revenue stemmed from these fraudulent ad sources. The report further alleged that Meta was hesitant to remove or suspend accounts, even those identified internally as “the scammiest scammers.” Executives reportedly feared that taking strict action against these advertisers would lead to a noticeable decline in ad revenue, which could in turn impact the company’s heavy investments in artificial intelligence (AI) development and infrastructure.

These revelations have sparked fresh debate about Meta’s commitment to user safety and transparency in digital advertising. Critics argue that prioritizing profits over consumer protection undermines trust in its platforms, especially as users increasingly encounter scams disguised as legitimate promotions. While Meta has yet to issue a detailed public response to these allegations, the report adds pressure on the company to tighten its ad screening processes and demonstrate stronger ethical oversight in its rapidly expanding AI-driven advertising ecosystem.

India Begins Repatriation of Citizens Who Fled Myanmar Cybercrime Center

India has begun repatriating hundreds of its nationals who fled from a major cybercrime hub in Myanmar following a military raid on the facility last month. The operation marks the latest effort to rescue victims of human trafficking linked to Southeast Asia’s booming online scam industry.

An Indian Air Force transport plane departed Thailand on Thursday carrying 270 people, with another flight scheduled later in the day. A total of 465 Indians will be flown home from the Thai border town of Mae Sot, where they had taken refuge after escaping the notorious “KK Park” compound in Myawaddy, Myanmar, according to Thai army commander Maj. Gen. Maitree Chupreecha. The remaining group is expected to leave on Monday.

Myanmar’s military raided KK Park in mid-October, part of a wider crackdown on cyber scams and illegal gambling operations that have flourished along its borders. The compound reportedly hosted a large-scale scam network where foreign workers — many trafficked or deceived by false job offers — were forced to run fraudulent online schemes.

In total, more than 1,500 people from 28 countries fled the Myawaddy raid. Thai authorities temporarily housed nationals from India, China, the Philippines, Vietnam, Ethiopia, and Kenya while coordinating repatriation with their governments.

The United Nations estimates that cyber scam centers across Southeast Asia generate nearly $40 billion annually, often using trafficked labor. While Myanmar’s junta says it is dismantling such operations, independent media including The Irrawaddy report that scam networks continue to operate in Myawaddy despite the raids.

The issue has drawn global attention: the U.S. and U.K. recently sanctioned organizers of a Cambodian scam ring, while South Korea was shaken by the death of a young man believed to have been lured into one such operation.