It happens at least once a week.
I open Viber and there's a notification — someone I don't know sent me a message. The profile photo looks like a real person. The name looks real too. But the message itself is blurred, sitting there like it's waiting for me to tap it and find out what's inside.
I've learned to just stare at it for a second and ask: do I know this person?
The answer is always no.
And that's already enough.
What's Actually Happening
Viber has a feature where messages from people outside your contact list are automatically blurred. It's a privacy protection — Viber is essentially saying "someone you don't know sent you something, proceed with caution."
The blurred message itself won't hurt you. Opening it to read it won't immediately compromise your phone. But what's usually inside is either a link, an unsolicited job offer, a "wrong number" opener, or something designed to get you to reply and engage.
That's where the danger starts — not the blur, but what comes after you engage.
The Messages I Actually Received (Real Screenshots)
I'm not pulling these from the internet. These came to my own Viber. All from numbers not in my contacts. All within recent weeks.
"Hi po! 😊" — That's it. Just a greeting from a stranger. No name I recognize, no context. This is the opener. If I reply, the next message reveals the actual agenda. I didn't reply.
"Hi! I'm with Grey Marketing Philippines. We have a part-time work-from-home role where you can earn daily. 💸 Can I send you the details?" — This one skips the small talk and goes straight to the job offer. Sounds like a real recruiter, right? It's not. This is a task-based scam. If you engage, they'll eventually ask you to deposit a small amount to "activate your account" or "unlock your first payout." You deposit. The payout never arrives. Your money is gone.
"Hi, how are you? po! ❤️" — Warm. Friendly. Uses Filipino po for politeness. Has a heart emoji. Feels like someone who genuinely wants to connect. That's the point. It's designed to make you feel rude for not responding.
And then there's Serena.
This one is the most sophisticated of the four. Her opening message claimed to be from a fashion design company in Malaysia, planning to invest in the Philippines — and that "Amani" had recommended me as "the most famous clothing agent in Manila."
I am a government employee in Surigao City. I am not a clothing agent. I have never been to Manila for business. Nobody named Amani knows me.
But read that message again. It's flattering. It's specific. It sounds almost believable if you're reading fast.
Then a few hours later, the follow-up: "Sorry sir, I checked the number and I entered the wrong number and thought you were Mr. Santos. I'm disturbing you, I hope you don't mind."
That "wrong number" recovery is a script. It is designed to make you say "oh no worries, it's fine!" — and the moment you do, you're in a conversation with a scammer. This technique has a name: Pig Butchering. They build a friendship first — sometimes over days or weeks — before slowly introducing an investment opportunity. By the time they ask for money, you already trust them.
I didn't reply to any of them. I blocked and reported all four.
Why the Profile Photos Look So Real
Because they're stolen.
Scammers scrape photos from real social media accounts — usually attractive, professional-looking people — and use them as fake profile photos. The person in the photo has no idea their image is being used this way. It's just bait to make the account look believable before you even read the message.
If you ever want to verify a suspicious profile photo, you can do a reverse image search on Google. Upload the photo and see if it appears anywhere else online. More often than not, it does.
Why Viber Specifically
Viber is deeply embedded in Philippine daily life — family groups, barangay announcements, office chats. Because so many legitimate messages come through Viber, people are conditioned to open and respond. Scammers know this.
They also know that Viber allows messages from unknown numbers by default, which gives them direct access to your inbox as long as they have your phone number — and phone numbers in the Philippines are not hard to find if you've ever entered yours on a form, a promo, or a delivery service.
What To Do When You See One
Block and report spam — not just block.
There's a difference. Blocking stops them from messaging you again. Reporting spam sends the information to Viber's trust and safety team so the account can be flagged across the platform. Both buttons are right there when you tap the message. Use both.
Don't reply — not even to say "wrong number."
Any reply confirms your number is active and monitored. That information has value to scammers. Silence is better than politeness here.
Don't click any links inside the blurred message.
If you're curious what the message says — Viber's own tip is to press the X button at the top of the blurred preview to remove the blur and read the text safely, without triggering any link. Read it. Then block and report.
Don't engage with the "wrong number" opener.
This is the most sophisticated version of the scam because it starts with something completely harmless. "Oh sorry wrong number, haha. Are you from Cebu?" Feels innocent. By the time you realize what's happening, you've been in conversation for days and someone is asking you to invest in something.
The Pig Butchering Scam — Know This One
I want to spend a little more time on this because it's the one that has hurt the most people financially.
Pig Butchering is an international scam operation — it originated in Southeast Asia and has spread globally. The name is intentionally uncomfortable: they "fatten the pig" before "slaughtering" it. The pig is you. The fattening is the friendship, the flattery, the slow trust-building. The slaughter is the moment they ask you to invest in something — usually crypto, forex, or a fake trading platform.
By that point, you've been talking to them for weeks. You like them. You trust them. And the amounts start small — ₱5,000, ₱10,000 — before growing bigger. Then one day the platform freezes your account, asks for a "withdrawal fee," and eventually disappears entirely.
The BSP and NPC have both issued warnings about this. If someone you met online — especially through an unsolicited message — starts talking to you about investment opportunities, that is your signal to stop the conversation immediately.
Mavs' Final Diagnosis
I get these messages regularly. At this point I don't even pause — I just block and report, move on, and go back to whatever I was doing.
But I know not everyone knows what they're looking at. Some people genuinely worry they missed an important message. Some people reply out of politeness. Some people click the link "just to see."
So here's the short version: if you don't know the number, don't engage. Block and report. It takes five seconds and it helps make Viber cleaner for everyone.
The scammers are patient. They send hundreds of messages a day hoping one person replies. Don't be that one person.
Stay safe out there.
Hope this helps anyone who reads this. And hey — have you been receiving random Viber messages like these? What did the message say? Drop it in the comments — let's help each other spot these things before they cause any damage.

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