If someone can afford broadband internet and smartphone then I would not say that that particular individual is living in "extreme" poverty. And take my word. No matter how poor someone is, he is not going to give you the scanned copy of his passport for just $10. Even stolen passports can cost upwards of $1,000 on various dark markets.
It's all subjective. In Malaysia the urban poverty line is a household income of below $750, reflecting how expensive it is to live in the city, the same in Philippines and Indonesia, or most other Southeast Asia countries for that matter. And when the majority of people are living on minimum wage of about $200, you can understand that even if they owned a cheap smartphone ($30) and broadband (in Msia it's $2.50 per month), you can't just say they're not extremely poor. Those are necessities now. More expensive to own a phone line and rent it monthly and pay call charges.