A spam text message appeared from myself

In the text thread for my own contact profile—the thread where messages show up if I send a text message to my phone number—a message showed with a phishing link, that I didn’t send.


It says below it “Not shown in Shared with You”.


All of the other texts I’ve sent to myself in the past are above it. This is in the actual thread for my own contact profile.


It only shows up once, on the left side in grey, as if I received it. Every other text in this thread (that I did actually send to myself) shows up twice—once on the right in blue when I sent it, and a second time on the left in grey when I received it. This one only shows up on the left in grey.


How is this possible?


I have two factor authentication enabled, so I know that nobody has signed in to my Apple ID externally.


I also know with certainty that nobody has physically gained unauthorized accessed to any of my devices.

Posted on Mar 27, 2022 1:47 PM

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Posted on Mar 28, 2022 11:47 AM

From The Verge this afternoon:


“Photo by Chris Welch / The Verge

This morning, I received a very blatant spam text offering me “a little gift” for supposedly paying my phone bill. Normally I’d groan, roll my eyes, and quickly delete such a thing, but there was something different about this particular message: it was spoofed as coming from my own phone number. As best my iPhone could tell, it was a legitimate message from me to myself. Tapping into the sender details took me to my own contact card.

Equally frustrating was that I had no obvious way of reporting the alarming spoof to my carrier, Verizon Wireless. Spoofed calls and texts are nothing new; most people face a constant deluge of spam calls that appear on caller ID as from a number similar to their own. But this was the first time I actually got something from my own number. These scammers keep getting more sophisticated.

Turns out I wasn’t alone. More than a few customers on Verizon reported getting similar spam from their respective numbers over the last few days — same for its MVNO Visible — and several Verge employees on other carriers have also encountered them. I posted an Instagram story about it and have gotten plenty of “same” responses. SMS phishing, or “smishing,” has been on the rise in recent years, but there’s something more disconcerting and invasive about it being linked to your own number. It’s all very “the call is coming from inside the house.”

The main reaction on Twitter is confusion and “how?!” Again, this is all spoofing and technological impersonation. It’s trivially easy for spammers to camouflage as any number they choose. My Verizon account is secure, and my number hasn’t been hijacked. If you’ve gotten the same message, there’s no cause for panic. Just don’t go clicking that link.

Still, it often feels like the phone carriers are losing the war against scammers. I don’t envy having to contend with the sheer volume of spam attacks that come across their networks daily, but this is getting out of hand. I’ve noticed an uptick in general SMS spam over the last several weeks. And as Alex Lanstein noted on Twitter, this particular message contains several phrases — “free msg,” “bill is paid,” “gift” — that one assumes would be flagged by Verizon’s spam protection systems. And yet it came through successfully. And since this one showed as coming from me, the text also successfully evaded Apple’s “filter unknown messages” feature.”

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A spam text message appeared from myself

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