跟读练习: Behind the scenes of an operation targeting online scammers | BBC News - 通过YouTube学习英语口语
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How much did you give him?
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How much did you give him?
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So, although...
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It was over 80,000, through that one bank account, yeah.
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80,000 pounds?
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Yeah, just over 80,000.
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If you thought fraud wasn't a priority for the police,
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this might be a surprise.
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So this operation is targeting the industry which enables fraudsters to operate.
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The criminals who provide other criminals with bank details,
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but also technical support and even training in how to steal money from unsuspecting victims.
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In the very early hours,
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two dozen officers are heading for a flat in South London.
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An arrest.
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He's suspected of selling personal financial information to scammers.
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And police abroad, especially Nigeria, are also making arrests.
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Bank and credit card fraud is up 15%,
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a major headache for police forces under pressure.
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The scale of fraud and the victimisation across the public and our communities is huge.
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People might not know, but there's a whole ecosystem out there that fraudsters are actively involved in,
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where they will buy and sell tradecraft.
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They will exchange information with each other,
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compromise data, credit card numbers, and tradecraft and scripts.
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And that really is where a lot of fraudsters will meet and learn their trade.
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So by focusing on those groups,
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it enables us to disrupt that whole ecosystem.
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The police can't do it all.
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Banks have set up their own team to track fraudsters.
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What we do is fight on their behalf in the shadows.
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BBC News was given exclusive access to the crack team of experts scouring the internet for scammers.
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We are relentlessly focused on the threats.
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We're always watching, we're always hunting for them on the dark web.
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I understand when a victim loses money that it's very distressing and the banks will respond to that.
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They respond to that very quickly and they've dedicated teams for doing so.
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The strategy is to hit the criminals before,
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during and after the fraud.
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Here they say it takes a chain of events for criminals to scam you out of your money.
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They prepare by researching what they're going to do,
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often learning from other criminals.
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They develop online resources, building or even buying fake bank websites.
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They use social engineering, dodgy text messages often,
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to trick you into paying up.
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Then your account has been compromised.
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But the crucial stage for the criminals is called the cash-out.
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These experts are from military intelligence,
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the police, cyber security companies.
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Investigators like Kate, not her real name,
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scoured data from the banks and scraped from chat rooms where anonymous scammers discuss their methods.
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When you go through the data,
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what are you looking for?
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That golden nugget, that piece of information that will help perhaps identify a network,
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a criminal service service or even a criminal operation.
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I find it hugely frustrating that these criminals are so callous and brazen about,
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there's no consideration for the victim.
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Kirsty has a difficult story to tell about herself,
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about how she met a man called Patrick on a dating site she thought from a fake profile was British.
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And he was a handsome man,
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he looked smart and I was drawn to him And I felt a connection with him.
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His words were hello and they're the five letters that have changed my life.
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And he wasn't pushy at the start?
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No, absolutely not, no. He built a rapport with me.
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There was no rush, so not like what you hear now,
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the acting haste, everything's quickly moved, love bombing.
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It wasn't like that at the beginning for me built a rapport,
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he explained about things in his childhood,
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we spoke about places where he'd lived,
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he spoke about places where I'd lived,
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so there was no real sense that this was going the wrong way for me.
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There was no red flags.
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You know, I was excited to get a message from him,
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I was excited to speak to him on the phone,
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and then he turned around and he said he'd been in an accident.
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Now, I'm the kind of person that would help anyone,
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even if I was on death's door myself.
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I pride myself on that.
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And when he said that,
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I just wanted to help him.
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And he asked me then,
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can you transfer some money,
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because I've not done the business deal and I need to finish that,
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or I'm going to be in hospital and I'm going to be out of pocket.
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How much did you give him?
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So, although it was over 80,000 through that one bank account, yeah.
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80,000 pounds?
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Yeah, just over 80,000.
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You completely trusted him, Kirsty, didn't you?
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Yeah, I did, yeah.
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Because people will hear this story and they'll think...
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Why did she do that?
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And that's why we need to make people fully aware of what this does
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and the coercion and the manipulation that you go under.
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The man whose images were stolen by the scammer to create Patrick is actually Jay,
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a former model with a family of his own.
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In a way, he's a victim too.
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Yeah, I mean, I look back,
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I'm in hospital, look at that.
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I've been contacted by that image before.
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That's not, that's just, I'm looking now and it's me taking a picture of waking up at 10 in the morning,
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having a lazy day.
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It's me in bed saying I'm ready to go out but I wanted to go back to bed.
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It was me eating a cake.
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These are all images of me trying to show my friends,
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just being a normal guy.
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You feel like someone's invaded your privacy and then you kind of worry about your reputation.
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I've worked quite hard with my modelling career,
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with how we're building our fitness business,
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how my mum and dad have brought me up with the disciplines and manners.
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You just think, oh gosh,
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what are people going This is a whole of society problem and we are reacting with a whole of society solution.
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We're providing law enforcement a force multiplier to enable their operations to hit harder,
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faster with less risk.
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The strategy has resulted in more than 500 arrests so far.
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But not as far as anyone knows Patrick.
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Kirstie's fraudster kept up the act right to the end.
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And then he's rung me up after I've been to the police station
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and he's saying how much he loved me and that he was sorry and thinking,
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how could you possibly be sorry if you're doing that?
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And he just kept saying it and then all of a sudden he just turned round and said,
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Kirsty, I've been in an accident.
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He hadn't stopped?
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No. And I threw the phone against that wall and they're still marking it now to this day,
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which I look at regularly, to remind myself.
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She's now rebuilding her florist business and her life,
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talking openly about what happened.
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She hopes Patrick will be caught.
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We, we are the first public presentation to the group.
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关于本课
在本节课中,学习者将会深入了解有关网络诈骗的操作及其背后的机制。通过分析警察如何打击诈骗分子,您将获得有关犯罪活动如何运作的宝贵信息。这将有助于提高您的英语口语能力,特别是在处理复杂话题时,增强思维反应能力,并让您对诈骗问题有更全面的认识。
关键词汇与短语
- 网络诈骗 - 指通过互联网进行的欺诈行为。
- 个人财务信息 - 个人的银行及财务细节。
- 社会工程学 - 一种通过操控人类心理来获取信息或金钱的技巧。
- 现金兑现 - 诈骗分子将盗取的资金转化为现金的过程。
- 诈骗生态系统 - 诈骗分子之间相互合作的网络。
- 非正规网络 - 通常指在暗网或私密社交平台上进行交易的环境。
- 专业团队 - 负责打击和追踪诈骗行为的警察及银行组成的团队。
练习技巧
进行英语影子跟读时,建议您关注视频中警察与诈骗分子之间的对话语速和情感色彩。以本视频为例,您可以尝试以下步骤:
- 听力理解:初次观看时,专注于理解每一句话的意思。在反复观看时,可以暂停并回放,以确保您理解讲话者所表达的观点。
- 语调模仿:注意讲者的语速与语气。当听到重要信息或情感表达时,尝试通过shadow speech技术模仿说话者的声调和语调。
- 逐句跟读:选择短句进行跟读,确保发音清晰、流利。在此过程中,可以利用拍手或敲击桌面来帮助维持节奏。
- 扩展对话:练习时可以与朋友进行角色扮演,模拟警察和诈骗分子之间的对话,增强练习的趣味性和真实性。
通过以上技巧,您将能够提高>雅思口语练习<和整体英语口语练习的水平。
什么是跟读法?
跟读法 (Shadowing) 是一种有科学依据的语言学习技巧,最初开发用于专业口译员的培训,并由多语言者Alexander Arguelles博士普及。这个方法简单而强大:您在听英语母语原声的同时立即大声重复——就像是一个延迟1-2秒紧跟说话者的影子。与被动听力或语法练习不同,跟读法强迫您的大脑和口腔肌肉同时处理并模仿真实的讲话模式。研究表明它能显着提高发音准确性,语调,节奏,连读,听力理解和口语流利度——使其成为雅思口语备考和真实英语交流最有效的方法之一。
