You matched with someone online. She sent you a nude video. Then asked you to show yourself. You did. Now she's demanding money or she'll send the video to your family, employer, or contacts.
This is a coordinated criminal scam. It is not a spontaneous threat from one woman. It is an organised operation, often running from multiple countries simultaneously.
Do not pay. Ever. Not even once.
You receive a friend request or match from an attractive woman. Her profile looks real — photos are genuine (usually stolen from real women on Instagram), there's a plausible backstory, she responds quickly and seems genuinely interested in you.
After building a small amount of trust (hours or days), she suggests moving to WhatsApp or video call. She initiates sexual conversation. She sends a nude video first — this is deliberate. It lowers your guard. She then asks you to reciprocate.
She screen-records your video without telling you. Or she was recording the whole call. Sometimes the "woman" you're talking to is not even on camera — it's a pre-recorded loop. Within minutes of your video, the tone changes completely.
She tells you she has your video. She has harvested your contacts (from WhatsApp, Facebook, LinkedIn). She names your family members. She names your employer. She demands payment — typically PKR 20,000–200,000 to start. She sets a deadline. She sends screenshots of her "sending" the video to prove she's serious.
Whether you pay or not, the demand increases. If you pay once, she knows you'll pay again. Every payment confirms you're a viable target. The only exit from this loop is to refuse entirely and report.
Every single FIA cybercrime investigator says the same thing: payment does not stop the blackmail. It begins it. The moment money moves, you have confirmed you are willing to pay. The demand will double. Then double again.
Sometimes yes, if you don't pay. Sometimes no, even if you don't pay — because sending the video is actually more work for them and doesn't generate money. The threat is the product, not the distribution.
If they do send it to your contacts: those contacts are likely to be horrified by the blackmailer, not you. Most people who receive unsolicited content like this from a stranger immediately understand they are witnessing a scam targeting someone they care about.
Section 21: Non-consensual sharing of intimate images — up to 5 years, PKR 5M fine
Section 24: Cyber harassment — up to 1 year, PKR 1M fine
Section 20: Offences against dignity — up to 3 years, PKR 1M fine
Section 17: Unauthorized access to systems/data — up to 3 months, PKR 50K fine
FIA has extradited suspects for these crimes. This is not an empty law.
On Zinaaa, every profile is verified. Every user carries a public rating. Anonymous scam operations cannot function on a platform where accountability is structural. This scam happens on WhatsApp and Facebook because there are no consequences there. Zinaaa builds the consequences in.