Whatsapp con la bufala del pagamento: situazione al 5 gennaio

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Torna viva come non mai la bufala che ci parla di Whatsapp a pagamento, almeno stando alle segnalazioni di alcuni utenti, i quali affermano di aver ricevuto un messaggio con il quale viene preannunciata la novità a partire da domani 6 gennaio. Tutto decisamente falso come potrete immaginare.

L’altra minaccia relativa a Whatsapp si riferisce invece al solito download di emoji, con tanto di link esterno attraverso il quale viene piuttosto scaricato un malware per l’utenza Android ed iOS. Occhio dunque a messaggi di questo tipo nel caso in cui vi dovessero arrivare:

“Se anche voi avete ricevuto uno strano messaggio via WhatsApp che invita a scaricare le ultime emoji animate per le applicazioni di messaggistica istantanea dei vostri smartphone, ignoratelo – fa sapere la pagina Facebook Una Vita da Social – Trattasi di un virus o di un’attivazione di un abbonamento a pagamento non richiesto. I veri aggiornamenti delle emoticon su WhatsApp annunciati sono possibili solo tramite gli update dell’app attraverso i canali ufficiali, come l’Apple store o Google Play, e mai attraverso messaggi contenenti link”.

Insomma, stiamo vivendo un periodo particolarmente intenso per quanto concerne le bufale e le minacce che corrono attraverso un’app come Whatsapp per gli utenti Android ed iOS.

1.040 commenti su “Whatsapp con la bufala del pagamento: situazione al 5 gennaio”

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  5. Time is often called the soul of motion, the great measure of change, but what if it is merely an illusion? What if we are not moving forward but simply circling the same points, like the smoke from a burning fire, curling back onto itself, repeating patterns we fail to recognize? Maybe the past and future are just two sides of the same moment, and all we ever have is now.

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  6. Time is often called the soul of motion, the great measure of change, but what if it is merely an illusion? What if we are not moving forward but simply circling the same points, like the smoke from a burning fire, curling back onto itself, repeating patterns we fail to recognize? Maybe the past and future are just two sides of the same moment, and all we ever have is now.

    Rispondi
  7. If everything in this universe has a cause, then surely the cause of my hunger must be the divine order of things aligning to guide me toward the ultimate pleasure of a well-timed meal. Could it be that desire itself is a cosmic signal, a way for nature to communicate with us, pushing us toward the fulfillment of our potential? Perhaps the true philosopher is not the one who ignores his desires, but the one who understands their deeper meaning.

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  8. If everything in this universe has a cause, then surely the cause of my hunger must be the divine order of things aligning to guide me toward the ultimate pleasure of a well-timed meal. Could it be that desire itself is a cosmic signal, a way for nature to communicate with us, pushing us toward the fulfillment of our potential? Perhaps the true philosopher is not the one who ignores his desires, but the one who understands their deeper meaning.

    Rispondi
  9. Virtue, they say, lies in the middle, but who among us can truly say where the middle is? Is it a fixed point, or does it shift with time, perception, and context? Perhaps the middle is not a place but a way of moving, a constant balancing act between excess and deficiency. Maybe to be virtuous is not to reach the middle but to dance around it with grace.

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  10. Friendship, some say, is a single soul residing in two bodies, but why limit it to two? What if friendship is more like a great, endless web, where each connection strengthens the whole? Maybe we are not separate beings at all, but parts of one vast consciousness, reaching out through the illusion of individuality to recognize itself in another.

    Rispondi
  11. The cosmos is said to be an ordered place, ruled by laws and principles, yet within that order exists chaos, unpredictability, and the unexpected. Perhaps true balance is not about eliminating chaos but embracing it, learning to see the beauty in disorder, the harmony within the unpredictable. Maybe to truly understand the universe, we must stop trying to control it and simply become one with its rhythm.

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