BBB releases list of top scams

By

VANCOUVER (NEWS1130) – It seems everywhere you go someone is trying to rip you off.

The Better Business Bureau wants you to watch out for several scams in the coming year.

We’ve all been warned about computer viruses or been told to beware of online sales sites. But through 2013, BBB CEO Danielle Primrose is concerned about teens and their smartphones.

Kids are being tricked into thinking they’ve won gift cards through text messages. “In the end, you never receive the card and you have given out your personal information.”

The BBB is also warning you about “curbers,” who pose as private car sellers and online dating scams, where fraudsters claim to be in love with you and suddenly ask for cash.

TOP SCAMS:

Top advertising scam: Advertising trolls
Consumers posting ads to free online listings like Craigslist to sell a vehicle are the target of unlicensed telemarketing companies. These companies are trolling through online ads to find someone to make a quick buck from. Companies often guarantee to sell vehicles quickly and promise a money-back guarantee. Problem is that these guaranteed vehicle brokers rarely sell your vehicle, rarely provide refunds, and only post your own ad to other free online listings – charging you a $500 fee for things you probably could do yourself for free.

  • Don’t let promises of guaranteed sales persuade you into a costly ad
  • Never give in to verbal promises, and do not provide credit card information until you have a contract that lays out all the terms and conditions
  • Check the company out on www.bbb.org

Top love scam: Online romance scams
You meet the person virtually through a social networking or dating site. Your online romance scammer builds a relationship, sometimes spending several months in building a rapport online with the intention of making you feel that you are in a romantic relationship. The person you met online turns out to be criminal who typically says that they are in a far-away country and that they eventually want to meet the victim in person.

Around this time, the criminal will note that they can’t afford to travel and will seek assistance from you in covering travel costs. Sometimes there’s an emergency, a sick family member for example, and that they need financial help from you to visit the sick individual. Of course, the requests for help are all a scam and the money wired by the victim, often in very large amounts, is now in the hands of the criminal.

Warning signs of a romance gone wrong:

  • Someone has claimed to have fallen in love with you quickly
  • That person wants to immediately leave the dating site to use instant messaging or email
  • They claim to be from the U.S. or Canada but they are working overseas
  • They’ve asked you for money or to cash a cheque
  • They are coming to visit you soon but an event prevents them from visiting
  • They have no close family or friends to turn to when they need help

Top financial scam: Affinity fraud
Online financial fraudsters send e-mail spam, or they approach you on a social media website or in a web forum. An internet advertisement may also lead you to a website, designed to gather your personal information, which they will use to approach you directly or to steal your identity.

Things to remember:

  • Don’t expect to get rich quick
  • Be careful with your personal information
  • Don’t be lured by claims of “insider information”
  • Delete and block spam emails
  • Do your own research
  • Make sure you get all the information you need before you invest (don’t be rushed into an investment)
  • Keep printed copies of all correspondence and investment information

Top online scam: Internet investment fraud
When a scam artist targets a group of people who know each other, it is called an affinity fraud. The investment schemes they promote may change or vary over time, but the methods they use to target groups are often the same. To be successful, scam artists need to earn the trust of an influential person in a group, family, or workplace. Once they establish this bond (and this can take time), they use this connection to get their hands on the money of other people in the group. In some cases, they may even pay the influencer to help them out, never telling the person that the investment is really a scam.

Warning signs include:

  • A new group member starts talking about wealth-building investments
  • The person pitching the investment uses your ethnicity, religion, occupation, or anything else they claim to have in common with you to gain your trust
  • Request to keep quiet about the investment because it is exclusive or only available to “those in the know”
  • An investment that seems too closely tied to a particular religious or group belief
  • Go to www.investright.org to learn more investment red flags

Top sales scam: Curbers
Curbers, or unlicensed used-car “traffickers,” often acquire junk cars and then sell them from parking lots or curbsides. They advertise through local newspapers and online ads. Later, the used car you bought privately may turn out to have a lien against it, the VIN (vehicle identification number) number switched, or the odometer rolled back. In some cases, the car turns out to be stolen.

  • Spot a curber when they have the same phone number listed for many cars and asks, “Which car?” when you call
  • The price seems too good to be true
  • The person is selling for a friend or has a sad story, and tries to rush you into buying
  • A curber will not meet at their home and insists on cash
  • Also, look to see if the name or location on the vehicle documents does not match the curber’s ID
  • Be wary of any person who wants you to lie on the transfer form
  • Report the curber and find a licensed dealer at www.vehiclesalesauthority.com

Top home improvement scam: Rogue door-to-door contractors
While some door-to-door salespeople have legitimate offers for you, beware of the rogue door-to-door operators who come unsolicited and promises deals that are too good to be true. These types of offers include: a deal to seal or repave your driveway, a roofer with leftover material from a previous job, a furnace repair that you didn’t schedule or a gas fireplace “inspection.”

These fraudulent “contractors” use high pressure sales tactics and offers of a onetime deal to entice or frighten consumers into expensive and often unnecessary home repairs.

  • Remember to take the time to do your due diligence
  • Ensure you get the company, name, address and all verbal promises are available in a written contract
  • Be leery if you are asked to pay in cash or a cheque with an offer to come back at another time to finish the job (you will probably never see them or your money again)
  • Direct sales (door-to-door) contracts are regulated in BC and you have 10 days to cancel by advising the company
  • For more information on direct sales, contact Consumer Protection BC at 1-888-564-9963 or visit www.consumerprotectionbc.ca

Top computer scam: Computer virus fixing scheme
This scam starts when you receive a call with a warning that your computer has been infected with a virus and an offer to clean your computer.  What is really happening in this computer virus fixing scheme?  The scammer is trying to gain remote access to your computer and get your credit card information. The scammer will say they need remote access to provide the supposed services, and will ask for your computer passwords and related information. They will also ask for your credit card information, so they can be billed for the supposed services.

Recognize the con:

  • If you receive an unsolicited call offering anti-virus services, requesting access to your computer or asking for credit card information, hang up!
  • Do not click on pop-up advertisement offering anti-virus services
  • NEVER give an unsolicited caller access to your computer
  • Always buy this software from a legitimate vendor you trust

Top youth scam: Twisted text prizes
You receive a text message. When you open it, you are surprised by a message informing you that you’ve won a major retailer’s gift card. You just need to go to a website and enter a PIN, and the card is yours. You are asked to enter the PIN and an email address. Then, you are taken to a form and instructed to fill out your name, cell number, mailing address and answer unrelated personal questions, such as “Are you interested in going back to school?” and “Are you diabetic?”When you reach the page to “laim your gift card,” you instead find yourself directed to another site to apply for a credit card.

In the end, you never receive a credit card and you have given out personal information.

  • Ignore instructions to text “STOP” or “NO” to prevent future texts – this is a common ploy by scammers to confirm they have a real, active phone number
  • Forward the texts to 7726 (SPAM on most keypads) – this will alert your cellphone carrier to block future texts from those numbers
  • If you think your text message is real, be sure it’s directing to a web address and not just a seemingly similar website name

Top business scam: pretender invoices
The “pretender scheme” is when scammers send you an invoice or bill requesting payment for goods or services. These invoices may state that you are past the due date for payment and threaten that non-payment will affect your credit rating. The invoices are fake and are for goods or services you haven’t ordered or received. For example, you might be sent an invoice for a domain name that is very similar to your current domain name or for a small amount of stationery. The scammer hopes that you don’t notice the difference and just pay the invoice.

Make sure the employee paying your invoices checks that a purchase order has been raised before they pay any invoice. Report any bogus invoice schemes to the Canadian Anti-Fraud Centre: www.antifraudcentre.ca.

Scam of the year: BBB fake complaint email
Yep, it’s us – the BBB phishing scam. Hundreds of thousands, perhaps millions, of people have gotten emails that very much look like an official notice from BBB. The subject line says something like “Complaint Against Your Business,” and the instructions tell the recipient to either click on a link or open an attachment to get the details. If the recipient does either, a malicious virus is launched on their computer…a virus that can steal banking information, passwords and other critical pieces of information needed for cyber-theft.

BBB is working with security consultants and federal law enforcement to track down the source of these emails, and has already shut down dozens of hijacked websites. Anyone who has opened an attachment or clicked on a link should run a complete system scan using reputable anti-virus software. If your computer is networked with others, all machines on the network should be scanned, as well.

BBB and partners will be using the Twitter hashtag #justincase to provide helpful tips to arm you with the knowledge on how to spot scams. Add your own tips using the same hashtag #justincase.

Top Stories

Top Stories

Most Watched Today