Research shows: three in five Dutch people occasionally receive a fake message that appears to come from a delivery service, large proportion insufficiently check sender Beware of online criminals posing as delivery services. New research by the central government shows that three in five Dutch people occasionally receive a fake message that appears to come from a delivery service. The sender is often not checked: almost half of the people who occasionally receive fake messages barely check such a message when they expect to receive a similar message. Around the holidays, millions of Dutch people have their Christmas shopping delivered to their homes. Among all the messages about the status of the delivery, a fake message is much less noticeable. With the campaign "Don't let yourself be duped online", the Dutch government calls on everyone to carefully check the sender of online messages and, if in doubt, to click the message away.
Anti-Islam populist Geert Wilders said Thursday he is ready to join the next Dutch coalition government after he surged to a huge election victory that marked a stunning lurch to the far right for a nation once famed as a beacon of tolerance
Dutch police said Friday they are investigating a stunt that saw a text alluding to an antisemitic conspiracy theory projected onto the Anne Frank House museum in Amsterdam, causing outrage across the country.