On March 29, 2026 the Investing News Network published an item noting that Turnstone Resources (ticker TSR:AU) has issued an investor webinar invitation. The brief release points readers to a downloadable PDF and sits alongside other corporate notices such as an unmarketable parcel sale facility and routine operational updates. This item is part of a rolling stream of press releases aimed at shareholders and interested investors who track junior mining and agricultural resource stories.
Alongside investor communications, consumers continue to face a surge in online and offline fraud attempts. Below you’ll find a concise summary of recent alerts — drawn from the same period — with concrete reporting steps to reduce harm. The goal is to keep both investors and everyday people informed about two parallel risks: market-moving company news and persistent consumer scams that can affect personal finances and data security.
Table of Contents:
Turnstone Resources: what the investor notice includes
The announcement highlights that Turnstone Resources has invited stakeholders to a dedicated investor webinar, and makes supporting documents available for download. The short bulletin appears amid other company filings listed by the Investing News Network, including items labeled Unmarketable Parcel Sale Facility and regular operational updates. Readers should note the company’s ticker (TSR:AU) when searching market platforms or regulatory filing systems, and look for the PDF mentioned in the release for specifics about timing, agenda, or participant access instructions.
Consumer scam roundup: patterns and priorities
Recent scam reports reveal recurring tactics: impersonation, fake delivery notices, and fraudulent promotional offers. Examples highlighted by consumer-watchers include printed leaflets with QR codes for fake garden waste subscriptions (reported 25 March), convincing copycat courier webpages tying into SMS alerts (23 March), and emails falsely warning of account closure to prompt clicks. These scams share a common strategy — they create urgency or credibility to trick victims into entering credentials or downloading malicious files. Knowing the likely formats helps you pause before you click.
Delivery frauds and parcel impersonation
Delivery-themed scams often begin with a text or leaflet stating a missed drop-off and a link to reschedule. The Evri copycat case (23 March) used authentic-looking logos and messaging to harvest personal data, while another campaign misused a genuine business’ WhatsApp account to send fake reschedule links (2 February). If you receive an unexpected delivery alert, verify directly with the official courier app or website rather than following embedded links. Suspicious sites should be reported to the National Cyber Security Centre to stop further spread.
Impersonation emails and account alarms
Email scams impersonating trusted brands are widespread: bogus messages claiming that Microsoft, Norton, Royal Mail, British Gas, and banks like NatWest or Royal Bank of Scotland have account issues have been flagged across recent weeks and months (examples noted on 23 March, 23 February, 19 January, 21 January and 5 January respectively). These usually include a call to action that leads to a phishing page. Forward suspicious emails to report@phishing.gov.uk and report any fraudulent webpages to the National Cyber Security Centre. Never enter credentials on a site reached via an unexpected link.
Practical reporting and prevention tips
To make reporting straightforward, mobile users in the UK can forward scam texts to 7726. For suspected scam calls you can text the word ‘call‘ followed by the number to 7726 if you have an iPhone; Android users should text ‘call‘ to 7726 and will receive a prompt to provide the number. For phishing emails, use report@phishing.gov.uk. Suspicious websites should be sent to the National Cyber Security Centre. These routes help authorities block scams faster and inform others through alerts.
How investors and consumers can stay proactive
Whether watching a company announcement like Turnstone’s investor webinar or protecting personal accounts, adopt two simple habits: verify and report. Confirm corporate notices through official channels (ASX announcements or company investor portals) and confirm suspicious messages via known contact points before acting. If you encounter a scam, use the recommended reporting channels to help authorities disrupt the operation and protect other potential victims. Staying cautious and sharing verified information strengthens collective resilience.
In short, company updates and consumer fraud warnings travel in parallel — each requires attention but different responses. Treat official investor communications with scrutiny toward disclosure details, and treat unsolicited messages about deliveries, accounts, or offers as potential scams until proven legitimate. Use the documented reporting tools, and keep contacts and credentials secure to reduce the chance of becoming a target.
