Zyan Cabrera
Cyber experts debunk viral ‘Pinay Gold Medalist’ video as phishing hoax. Facebook/Zyan Cabrera

When posts about a certain 'Pinay Gold Medalist Video' began flooding social media during the initial phase of the 2026 Winter Olympics, they looked like just another viral scandal.

However, after fact-checking, cybersecurity experts found that the trend is a textbook example of what's known as an MMS trap, a phishing scheme that uses fake multimedia 'leaks' to trick people into handing over their passwords or downloading malware.

In this case, the name associated with the hoax, Filipino content creator Zyan Cabrera, also known as Jerriel Cry4zee, appears to have been drawn into it without any connection to the claims.

What Is an MMS Trap?

MMS stands for Multimedia Messaging Service. It is a format that allows users to send videos, images and audio clips via text or messaging apps.

An MMS trap takes advantage of that format. Instead of sending plain text like traditional 'smishing' scams, fraudsters circulate posts that appear to contain leaked videos or explicit images. The visual element makes them more convincing and intriguing, increasing the likelihood of a click.

A viral phishing scam is fooling users across social media.
A viral phishing scam, using 'Pinlay Gold Medalist Video' as bait, is fooling users across social media. Pixabay

According to cybersecurity firm Proofpoint, MMS abuse has risen sharply since mid-2025. Analyst Ciaran Boyle said scammers are increasingly using small media files and visual bait to bypass filters and increase engagement.

The Federal Trade Commission has repeatedly warned about 'smishing' campaigns that use fraudulent multimedia content to lure victims to fake login pages. FTC consumer expert Caresse Jackman has advised users to verify sources before clicking, noting that many of these scams result in account takeovers.

In short, the video is bait. The real goal is your login credentials.

How the 'Pinay Gold Medalist' Hoax Spread

The posts began appearing in early February, just as the Milano Cortina Winter Olympics opened on 6 February.

They typically featured a split-screen: a split-screen image on one side, an innocent dance clip from Cabrera's TikTok account on the other, and a blurred, explicit thumbnail. Captions suggested she was a Filipina Olympic gold medalist caught in a leaked 'boyfriend video.' None of that was reportedly true.

Zyan Cabrera
FB/ Andrea Naucita

Cabrera is a social media creator, not an Olympic athlete, and there is no verified video.

Clicking the link does not play the footage; it instead opens a Facebook login screen or prompts users to verify their age before watching. Entering credentials gives scammers direct access to the account, which is then used to tag friends and spread the same link further.

MMS Trap Is A Growing Epidemic

The Cabrera hoax is not isolated.

Similar campaigns have targeted other Asian influencers in recent months, often using precise timestamps, keywords, tempting hooks and thumbnails to make fake leaks sound authentic. The structure is the same: unrelated footage, an explicit thumbnail and a malicious redirect.

There is no verified count of victims in the 'Pinay Gold Medalist' case, but cybersecurity researchers tracking the links say thousands of accounts may have been exposed across different variants of the scam.

Experts recommend avoiding suspicious links, even if they appear to come from someone you know. Enable two-factor authentication on social media accounts, and report posts that appear to promote leaked or explicit content tied to trending news.