There is an unwritten code in the world of scam call centers. They never introduce themselves with their real names. They lure you with the guarantee "the more you invest, the more you earn." The simplest are phishing messages, where financial hackers presented themselves as Albanian Post, but in reality, it was a fake page where, when you confirm an online purchase, you have just given a cybercriminal your personal and bank card details. From this financial fraud scheme, it turned out that two Chinese citizens had sent 10,000 messages to Albanian citizens, many of whom were deceived. Thousands of other Albanians received a phone message from virtual financial scammers, who self-declare as traffic police, where the fine is paid online. In an interview for "Exclusive" with journalist Anila Hoxha, Klodian Bilushi, head of cybercrime investigation, says: "They built a page similar to the state police and asked us to provide the data." Through technology that offers conveniences, we actually live in the space between the real and the virtual, in a digital world where a wrong click, as well as applications often turned into new modern weapons, risk taking everything from you, starting from privacy to the bank account. And when this crime has no face, frequent online incidents turn our lives into a space where victims and perpetrators coexist without knowing each other. The 2026 digital map of the Global Initiative against Transnational Crime includes Albania among dozens of countries where scam centers are installed, unlike call centers, an industry that, by ruining people's lives, fills the pockets of criminals. In just one year, the police conducted 12 operations and arrested 89 suspects for computer fraud, illegal employment, and income concealment. This figure does not include those suspects investigated as a criminal group. All these buildings you are following at the moment are the places used as bases where scam call centers were discovered. From computers installed in a house, in an office adapted as a phone workshop, everywhere from Albania or other Balkan countries, young squads, known as operators, were activated. He speaks the victim's language. His task is to lure you into the trap through a promising advertisement, from which you are robbed. Their motto is: "If I don't take the money, someone else will." His virtual name, with which he introduced himself, is Max. In real life, he is still a conditionally convicted person by the Tirana court for the charge of computer fraud. Today he is unemployed and repentant. His work lasted four months, until the day he was arrested. A young man says: "I am from Tirana, I have been an emigrant in Italy for ten years, and I decided to return to Albania. I see an online advertisement, which mentioned a call center, I contacted them, they responded very quickly. They called me for an interview, which was very short, lasted very little, and they hired me directly. They offered me five days of training. At first, it seemed completely normal to me, they accepted me with a very good salary, and I decided, why not. The job was that I would talk to other people, they gave us a list with some names and surnames of people. The list was very long, you won't get tired, they said, you will benefit from bonuses."