Philippine Daily Inquirer

THOUSANDS OF TAYLOR SWIFT FANS HIT BY UK TICKET SCAMS

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LONDON—Thousands of fans of pop megastar Taylor Swift have been hit by a wave of concert ticket scams ahead of her tour in the United Kingdom later this year, a British bank said Wednesday.

At least 3,000 victims are likely to have been tricked into buying fake tickets since July, with over 1 million pounds ($1.24 million) being lost to fraudsters so far, Lloyds Bank said.

The average amount lost by each victim was 332 pounds, though in some cases it was more than 1,000 pounds.

The bank said more than 90 percent of reported cases started with fake adverts or posts on Facebook.

On the rise

Concert ticket scams had risen by 158 percent since last summer compared to the same period a year earlier, the bank added.

US singer Beyoncé, British band Coldplay and musician Harry Styles are the artists most commonly used in the targeting, it noted.

Across all concert ticket scams, victims were losing 133 pounds on average.

A search of Facebook revealed dozens of unofficial groups had been set up, many with tens of thousands of members, specifical­ly for people looking to buy and sell tickets for Swift concerts, Lloyds said.

Facebook Marketplac­e, the social media company’s trading platform, has various listings for tickets at venues nationwide, the bank said.

Fake ads, posts

The scams usually involve fake adverts, posts or listings on social media, offering tickets at discounted prices, or access to events which have already sold out at inflated prices.

Victims are asked to pay upfront for the tickets, but once the payment is made, the scammers disappear. This leaves the buyer without the tickets and out of pocket.

“If you’re being asked to pay by bank transfer, particular­ly from a seller you’ve found on social media, that should immediatel­y set alarm bells ringing,” said Lloyds Bank fraud prevention director Liz Ziegler.

“Buying directly from reputable, authorized platforms is the only way to guarantee you’re paying for a genuine ticket. Even then, always pay by debit or credit card for the greatest protection.”

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