According to Gizmodo, there’s a growing concern about scammers looking to take advantage of people trying to apply for the student debt forgiveness program. The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) and President Biden have spoken out, warning borrowers to be vigilant about what information they share and with who.

Student loan forgiveness scams are targeting people in sneaky ways:

The FBI notes that cybercriminals may attempt to contact people applying for the loan to convince them to provide personal or financial information that could be used for scams or identity theft later. The agency also noted that some scammers are asking people for “processing fees,” which the FBI notes is not a practice of the agency, federal government, or its loan partners. According to CNET, people need to be aware that scams don’t only come as emails. Borrowers must be suspicious of shady social media posts, QR codes, text messages, and phone calls. Beware of any application or person, text, or email asking you to:

attach or upload any documentsgive out bank account or credit card information, or your FSA IDpay for processing fees or any other part of the loan applicationoffering you faster application approval if you pay a feeasking you to pay with cryptocurrency — not only is applying free, but scammers could be trying to access your crypto wallet

How do you avoid being caught in a student loan forgiveness scam?

The best way to avoid scams is to know what scams look like. “Unsolicited emails and other messages should be ignored, and attachments inside of them should never [be] opened,” CNET explains. Another important way to avoid getting caught in a scam is to pay attention to the sender’s addresses for any emails regarding loan forgiveness. The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) says you can expect email updates from the Department of Education regarding loan forgiveness only. At that time, you might be asked to upload documents for verification. But those emails will come from only one of three addresses only:

noreply@studentaid.govnoreply@debtrelief.studentaid.goved.gov@public.govdelivery.com

“Pay close attention the sender address for emails about loan forgiveness — looking for slight typos — to avoid a scammer’s fake emails,” the commission suggests. The FBI says that if you have been a victim of a scam, it should be reported to the Internet Crime Complaint Center at IC3.gov. The FTC has a reporting site, too, at ReportFraud.ftc.gov.