As the holiday Season begins, the FBI is warning consumers of holiday scams:
Every year,
thousands of people become victims of holiday scams. Scammers can rob you of
hard-earned money, personal information, and, at the very least, a festive
mood.
The two most prevalent of these holiday scams are non-delivery
and non-payment crimes. In a non-delivery scam, a buyer pays for goods or
services they find online, but those items are never received. Conversely, a
non-payment scam involves goods or services being shipped, but the seller is
never paid.
According to the Internet Crime Complaint Center’s (IC3) 2021
report, non-payment or non-delivery
scams cost people more than $337 million. Credit card fraud accounted
for another $173 million in losses.
Similar scams to beware of this time of year are auction fraud,
where a product is misrepresented on an auction site, and gift card fraud, when
a seller asks you to pay with a pre-paid card.
The IC3 receives a large volume of complaints in the early
months of each year, suggesting a correlation with the previous holiday
season’s shopping scams.
If You’ve Been Scammed
- Call your credit
card company or your bank. Dispute any suspicious charges.
- Contact local law
enforcement.
- Report the scam to
the FBI’s Internet Crime Complaint Center (IC3) at ic3.gov.
Tips to Avoid Holiday
Scams
Whether you’re the buyer or the seller, there are a number of
ways you can protect yourself—and your wallet.
Practice good cybersecurity
hygiene.
- Don’t click any
suspicious links or attachments in emails, on websites, or on social
media. Phishing scams and
similar crimes get you to click on links and give up personal information
like your name, password, and bank account number. In some
cases, you may unknowingly download malware to your device.
- Be especially wary
if a company asks you to update your password or account
information. Look up the company’s phone number on your own and call the
company.
Know who you’re buying from or selling
to.
- Check each
website’s URL to make sure it’s legitimate and secure. A site you’re
buying from should have https in the web address. If
it doesn’t, don’t enter your information on that site.
- If you’re
purchasing from a company for the first time, do your research and check
reviews.
- Verify the
legitimacy of a buyer or seller before moving forward with a purchase. If
you’re using an online marketplace or auction website, check their
feedback rating. Be wary of buyers and sellers with mostly unfavorable
feedback ratings or no ratings at all.
- Avoid sellers who
act as authorized dealers or factory representatives of popular items in
countries where there would be no such deals.
- Be wary of sellers
who post an auction or advertisement as if they reside in the U.S., then
respond to questions by stating they are out of the country on business,
family emergency, or similar reasons.
- Avoid buyers who
request their purchase be shipped using a certain method to avoid customs
or taxes inside another country.
Be careful how you pay.
- Never
wire money directly to a seller.
- Avoid paying for
items with pre-paid gift cards.
In these scams, a seller will ask you to send them a gift card number and
PIN. Instead of using that gift card for your payment, the
scammer will steal the funds, and you’ll never receive
your item.
- Use a credit card
when shopping online and check your statement regularly. If you see a
suspicious transaction, contact your credit card company to dispute the
charge.
Monitor the shipping process.
- Always get tracking
numbers for items you buy online, so you can make sure they
have been shipped and can follow the delivery process.
- Be suspect of any
credit card purchases where the address of the cardholder does not match
the shipping address when you are selling. Always receive the cardholder’s
authorization before shipping any products.
And remember: If it seems too good to be
true, it probably is.
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