I decided to ice this article a bit so as not to give tips to bad faces. The message must have reached the addressee, because their press department was able to write in the evening, well after the end of working hours, not to correct what was written in the article, but to take it down, because otherwise.
I wrote back to them, but only the mailer daimon responded, others also complained that they no longer receive emails.
So I hope the article achieved its goal and there will be effective changes on the online interface of the State Treasury.
I am copying the end of the article, pass it on to everyone near you.
Until the Treasury does something, warn all your relatives, especially the elderly, that if for any reason they receive a call from the Treasury for any reason, do not do anything they ask, but hang up the phone and they will dial the short number 1811. If he’s really upset, they’ll tell him there anyway, and then he’s definitely talking to them.
Draw their attention to the fact that what your phone displays as the calling number on its screen does not mean anything, even if you see this number as an incoming call, it can be faked. That’s why you should write down all the necessary phone numbers (Treasury, your bank’s number, etc.) and make a mental note that anyone calling you, supposedly from a bank or the State Treasury, disconnects the line and he dials the guaranteed good bank number.