Pause
Do not delete messages, close accounts, or erase records before saving the facts.
Understand the incident, preserve important evidence, prepare reporting details, and strengthen account safety after online fraud, impersonation, harassment, marketplace fraud, or business cyber risk.
Use a calm sequence before making decisions after a cyber incident.
Every cyber incident has a different first response. Select a case type to view focused guidance before moving forward.
Preserve transaction records, UPI IDs, account details, payment screenshots, SMS messages, app names, phone numbers, emails, and every communication from the suspected fraudster.
This response flow helps visitors stay calm, protect evidence, reduce risk, and prepare accurate details for the right reporting path.
Do not delete messages, close accounts, or erase records before saving the facts.
Save screenshots, links, phone numbers, emails, usernames, transactions, and chats.
Change passwords, enable two factor authentication, and review active sessions.
Create a short timeline of what happened, when it happened, and what was affected.
Approach the appropriate authority, bank, platform, institution, or professional advisor.
This interactive vault helps victims organize records that may support investigation, reporting, financial review, or professional guidance.
Mark items as saved to check whether the basic evidence set is organized.
A clear report needs the incident type, affected account, timeline, financial or data impact, and available evidence.
Select the concern and enter the affected area. The guidance note updates instantly.
Prepare transaction records, payment screenshots, bank or UPI details, phone numbers, messages, emails, and a clear timeline before contacting the relevant institution or authority.
Use this quick console as a recovery reminder after preserving evidence and preparing incident details.
Cyber Crime Help .org provides general awareness about cyber laws, reporting ecosystems, and evidence preservation. This information should not be treated as legal advice.
Addresses several cyber offences and electronic transaction related issues, including hacking, data theft, identity theft, cyber terrorism, and privacy breaches.
Digital conduct may involve cheating, fraud, criminal intimidation, forgery, extortion, defamation, stalking, and harassment depending on the facts.
Focuses on personal data protection, individual rights, obligations of organizations, breach reporting, and penalties for non compliance.
Keep original messages, emails, links, call logs, account details, and payment records available whenever possible. Screenshots are helpful, but original records can also matter.
Preserve transaction details and contact the relevant bank, payment provider, or financial institution quickly. Keep communication records related to the incident.
No. Cyber Crime Help .org is an awareness and informational platform. Users should report cyber crimes to appropriate authorities and seek professional legal advice where required.
Use this guidance page to understand your situation, collect key records, and organize details before approaching the relevant authority, bank, platform, institution, or advisor.
Cyber Crime Help .org is an awareness and informational platform. It does not replace law enforcement agencies, courts, regulators, or qualified legal professionals.