Phishing SMS Guide
A practical guide to phishing sms guide for Indian users who want fewer interruptions, safer communication and better digital boundaries.
Spam and scam protection is a safety habit, not just a setting. DND may reduce commercial noise, but fraudsters may still use unknown numbers, messaging apps, spoofed sender names, fake delivery alerts, fake KYC warnings, loan offers, investment tips or impersonation. The safest rule is simple: do not act in panic.
Unknown callers asking for OTPs, screen sharing, payment links, card details, banking passwords, APK installation or urgent money transfer should be treated as suspicious. Families should especially help senior citizens and children understand that genuine banks, government departments and telecom operators do not need OTPs or remote access to “protect” an account.
Quick checklist
- Do not share OTP, PIN, UPI PIN, card CVV, passwords or screen-share access.
- Save suspicious SMS/call details before deleting them.
- Use official apps and websites typed manually, not links from unknown messages.
- Report suspected spam or fraud through official channels where applicable.
- Discuss common scam examples with family members, especially seniors.
Practical examples
People who want a practical, simple and safer DND setup without getting lost in technical menus.
Do not block emergency contacts, banking alerts, school calls, medical calls or critical family communication.
For telecom spam complaints, preserve number/header, date, time and message/call details where possible.
Recheck the setup every few months because apps, phone menus and telecom rules change.
Recommended setup approach
Start with the least risky change first. If you are dealing with calls and SMS spam, register or update your telecom DND preference and preserve complaint evidence. If you are dealing with phone distractions, clean app notifications before using aggressive DND rules. If this is for a family member, add emergency contacts and test the setup before leaving it active overnight.
For work or study, create a named routine such as Work Focus, Study Focus or Meeting Mode. Allow only calls from selected contacts, calendar alerts and essential apps. For family time, create a calmer rule: messages can wait, but urgent family calls should still pass through. For seniors, keep the setup simple and write down what has been changed.
Common mistakes
- Confusing telecom DND with phone Do Not Disturb. They solve different problems.
- Blocking all calls without allowing emergency contacts.
- Deleting spam SMS before noting the sender/header, date and time.
- Trusting unknown callers who claim they can activate DND by taking OTPs or remote access.
- Making the setup too strict, then disabling it completely after missing an important alert.
When to get help
Need guided help? Our Senior Citizen & Scam Protection Setup can help families review phone settings, reduce exposure to spam, create emergency contact lists and build safer habits around unknown calls, links and OTP requests.