Tobira Systems Report on Special Fraud and Phishing Scams (February 2026)
NQ Score
50/100
AI Summary (NQ-processed)
Spam calls saw a significant decrease in international numbers, with an increase in mobile and 050 numbers. Fake police scams were prevalent with international numbers like '+1' and '+875', sometimes originating from calls impersonating service providers. In February, SMS messages impersonating the 'National Tax Agency' were frequent, likely capitalizing on tax filing season. Corporate fraudulent transfer damage reaches 4.7 billion yen, a fourfold increase year-on-year, with three new tactics to watch out for as the new fiscal year begins.
AI analysis data is not yet available.
Frequently Asked Questions
- Q: What is the research period covered by the Tobira Systems report on special fraud?
- A: The research period covered by the report is from February 1, 2026, to February 28, 2026.
- Q: What percentage of spam calls in February 2026 were international numbers?
- A: International numbers accounted for 44.9% of the spam calls in February 2026, down 22.3% from the previous month.
- Q: Which specific international country codes were frequently used in fake police scams?
- A: International country codes beginning with '+1' and '+875' were frequently used in fake police scams.
- Q: Why were SMS messages impersonating the National Tax Agency frequent in February?
- A: SMS messages impersonating the National Tax Agency were frequent in February, likely capitalizing on the tax filing season.
- Q: How much damage did corporate fraudulent transfers cause, and how does it compare year-on-year?
- A: Corporate fraudulent transfer damage reached 4.7 billion yen, which represents a fourfold increase year-on-year.