Yuma Sun

BBB Scam Alert: Survey scam is back with a COVID-19 twist

- Better Business Bureau John Hessinger Yuma-based John Hessinger is community developmen­t director of the Better Business Bureau serving the pacific Southwest. He can be contacted at john.hessinger@ bbbcommuni­ty.org or 928-919-7940.

Did you receive a text with a survey about your vaccine? It’s one of those scams that just keeps reappearin­g … each time with a new twist. This time, the phony survey claims to be from pharmaceut­ical company Pfizer, with questions about their COVID-19 vaccine.

HOW THE SCAM WORKS

You receive an email or text message that claims to be from Pfizer, one of the pharmaceut­ical companies producing an approved COVID-19 vaccine. In some versions the message claims that you will receive money for completing a quick survey. Other versions offer a “free” product or gift.

It sounds easy, but don’t click the link! These survey scams have a variety of tricks. The link may lead to a real survey, which upon completion, prompts you to sign up for a “free trial offer.” Victims reported to BBB Scam Tracker that they entered their credit card informatio­n to pay what they thought was a shipping fee. Instead, the scammers billed them many times more and never sent the product. In other versions, the form is actually a phishing scam that requests banking and credit card informatio­n.

“I received an email asking me to complete a survey in support of COVID-19 research which offered up to $1,200 as a reward. After completing the survey, the website asked me to choose a gift but then I was required to pay a fee of $19.73 for shipping and handling,” stated a victim reported on BBB’s Scam Tracker.

Just because scammers are currently impersonat­ing Pfizer, doesn’t mean the other COVID-19 vaccine producers are off the hook. Watch out for variations claiming to be from Janssen and Moderna, too.

HOW TO SPOT A SURVEY SCAM

In general, it’s best not to click on links that come in unsolicite­d emails. Here are some more ways to spot a malicious email just in case your spam filter doesn’t catch it.

The email claims to have informatio­n about you, but you never signed up for it. Scams often pretend to be personaliz­ed for you, but they are actually blast emails. Don’t fall for this! If you never signed up for emails from a company, you shouldn’t be receiving them.

Pushes you to act immediatel­y. Scammers typically try to push you into action before you have had time to think. Always be wary of emails urging you to act immediatel­y or face a consequenc­e.

Watch for typos, strange phrasing and bad grammar. Scammers can easily copy a brand’s name, but awkward wording and poor grammar are typically a giveaway that the message is a scam.

For example, one version of the survey scam impersonat­ing

Pfizer uses the wrong company logo.

Hover over URLs to reveal their true destinatio­n. Typically, the hyperlinke­d text will say one thing, but the link will point somewhere else. Make sure the links actually lead to the business’s official website, not a variation of the domain

name.

BBB has identified many ways in which scammers are cashing in the COVID-19 pandemic. Learn more about clinical trial scams, contract tracing cons, counterfei­t face masks, and government agency impostors.

Sign up for BBB Scam Alerts to receive weekly

notices of emerging scams to avoid, and if you’ve spotted a scam report it to BBB.org/ScamTracke­r.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES VIA BBB ?? THE BETTER BUSINESS BUREAU has received reports of phony surveys purportedl­y from the pharmaceut­ical company Pfizer with questions about the COVID-19 vaccine.
GETTY IMAGES VIA BBB THE BETTER BUSINESS BUREAU has received reports of phony surveys purportedl­y from the pharmaceut­ical company Pfizer with questions about the COVID-19 vaccine.
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