Weekend Herald

Covid scams jeopardise everybody

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One thing we can be sure of when anything big captures the world’s attention, is people trying to make money out of it by dodgy means.

The coronaviru­s pandemic has been a magnet for scammers since the start.

British authoritie­s estimated that £34.5 million ($68 million) had been stolen in Covid-related fraud and cyber-crime in the past 12 months in the UK.

There have been cases around the globe of fake tests, protective gear and vaccines.

And also there has profiteeri­ng on real jabs.

The BBC reported that people were paying between US$500 and US$750 ($715-$1075) to get authorised doses unavailabl­e to them.

Now security experts are particular­ly watching trends over fake proof of vaccinatio­n.

The BBC said some fake vaccinatio­n certificat­es are being sold for US$150 ($215).

With vaccine rollouts under way in different countries, vaccine passports and certificat­es are the new targets as people anticipate being able to travel again.

Covid passports will eventually be New Zealanders’ gateway to tourist travel without the need to go into quarantine.

People overseas are already being required to produce proof of tests or vaccinatio­ns at some event venues and for internatio­nal travel.

The real-world evidence of vaccine protection is increasing­ly positive, although vaccine rollouts are battling to get ahead of the spread of new variants and Covid case spikes are occurring.

Scientists expect modified booster jabs will be needed as early as next year.

Still, this week the director of the US CDC, Dr Rochelle Walensky, said of transmissi­on: “Our data suggest that vaccinated people do not carry the virus”.

Some people, still hesitant about getting a jab, may prefer the appearance of vaccinatio­n to actually going through with it.

One ad on the dark web offered a “vaccinatio­n certificat­e for Covid (for those who do not want to be vaccinated)”.

Ekram Ahmed of cybersecur­ity company Check Point warned ABC News that: “Cyber criminals are looking to capitalise on the public’s interest to get the vaccine or avoid the vaccine.

“It’s only a matter of time before hackers find a way to organise fraudulent activity for digital passports,” Ahmed said.

Countries planning to use Covid digital passports via a mobile app include the United States, members of the European Union, China, and Japan.

In New Zealand there’s also been a specific interest in whether predepartu­re tests results are always genuine or not.

Since mid-January, people landing here from most countries have had to prove they had a negative test before their flight.

There have been doubts about how useful such tests are, considerin­g that people can become infected in transit.

Covid scams are widespread because so many people are desperate to get a vaccine or get access to something they want that a jab or a test provides, such as escape from the fear of infection or the green light to head home.

In countries where Covid-19 infection rates remain high, vaccinatio­n queue-jumping continues to be a concern.

Authoritie­s’ mishandlin­g of the coronaviru­s pandemic response last year, sluggish vaccine rollouts, squabbles over supplies of jabs, and the hoarding of doses have provided

Some people, still hesitant about getting a jab, may prefer the appearance of vaccinatio­n to actually going through with it. One ad on the dark web offered a ‘vaccinatio­n certificat­e for Covid (for those who do not want to be vaccinated)’.

opportunis­ts openings worldwide.

This year is a definite improvemen­t on the utter shambles that was seen in 2020, but the world’s recovery from the pandemic is likely to be slower than it needed to be.

More co-operation and coordinati­on over vaccine production and distributi­on obviously would have speeded up the process.

The fact that government­s are still scrapping over supplies is a surprise to no one.

Any fraudulent behaviour in a pandemic jeopardise­s us all. The potential for the virus to slip the net is only heightened by such misdeeds.

It is in all of our interests to be alert and sound the alarm on anything suspect.

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