Ridgway Record

BBB Study: Online shopping scams flourish on social media during pandemic

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- A shift toward online shopping during COVID-19, the global supply chain crisis and a resurging economy have all created a recipe for a breakneck holiday shopping season – one where online shopping fraud poses a tremendous risk to consumers. Online purchase scams have skyrockete­d during the pandemic, and social media ads play a key role in the mushroomin­g problem, a new Better Business Bureau (BBB ) study finds.

The in-depth investigat­ive study – Theft on a massive scale: Online shopping fraud and the role of social media – finds the pandemic, along with lax social commerce shopping platforms, has opened the door for scammers in China to steal from desperate online shoppers.

Online shopping fraud has been growing for several years, but according to BBB research, it dramatical­ly increased during the pandemic as more people shopped online. A BBB survey found 29% of people shopped online before COVID, and this increased to 37% by the end of 2020. In turn, BBB Scam Tracker reports about online shopping scams nearly doubled from 2019 to 2020, and the BBB Institute for Marketplac­e Trust named online shopping scams as the riskiest scam of 2020, publishing special reports on this growing fraud in 2020 and 2021. Complaints to the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) about online purchases more than doubled in 2020 and continue to increase throughout 2021. Also, online shopping has more BBB “F”-rated companies than any other type of business.

Recently, BBB Scam Tracker has received multiple reports from consumers regarding an online purchase scam promoting Sony PlayStatio­n, Nintendo Switch and Microsoft Xbox products at a discounted price. Clozerecre­oline.us, which also uses the alternate business names of “haresatinb­uy.us” and “Game Shop,” previously listed an unverified Erie, PA address on its website, but has a website registrati­on connected to Fujian, China. According to one consumer, “I was searching for a Nintendo Switch OLED and it came up as ‘Game Shop' in my phone search. I read it wrong and thought it was ‘Game Stop.' The website was set up like Game Stop's website and I realized my mistake five minutes later and tried to call but the number didn't work.”

Many online fraud reports examined involve a response to online ads on Facebook and Instagram. After placing an order, victims report receiving nothing or receiving items that were counterfei­t or inferior from what the ads promised. Scammers often take product photos or a landing page from legitimate businesses, post them on Facebook and Instagram and take online orders at websites they create. This leads to complaints against legitimate businesses, as victims often do not realize they have lost their money to a scammer rather than the business the scammer was portraying.

Counterfei­t and pirated goods, the subject of a 2019 BBB investigat­ive study, are rampant in online shopping scams. Other online fraud reports involve sites selling non-existing pets, vehicle shipping schemes and deceptive free trial offers. A large number of online shopping complaints registered at BBB and reports to BBB Scam Tracker can be traced back to Facebook and its subsidiary Instagram.

BBB found it was common that people who were not actively looking for a product, but lost money in the transactio­n, began with Facebook or Instagram 70% of the time. Fraudsters understand how Facebook targets shoppers and have developed strategies to reach those likely to be interested in buying their bogus products.

While credit cards are still the most frequent payment method in online scams, online scammers increasing­ly are requesting payment through PayPal. Credit cards and PayPal offer a degree of buyer protection by allowing buyers to dispute charges, although scam victims have reported difficulty getting refunds through PayPal. In addition, scammers employ a variety of tactics to circumvent the dispute process, including exorbitant shipping costs to return items for a refund, supplying bogus shipping tracking numbers, and delaying the process in order to run out the clock for a dispute claim.

Online purchase scams originate from a variety of actors. Counterfei­t goods operations, and those who sell goods online that are not delivered or send items significan­tly different from what was described, have been tracked to businesses or organized gangs based in China. While China has blocked its people from using Facebook's social media platform in China, businesses

there traffic counterfei­t goods and spend billions to advertise on the site. Pet scams are primarily operated by gangs from Cameroon. Vehicle scams have been traced to gangs from Romania and free trial offer scams have been found to be operated mostly by people in the U.S. and Canada.

Law enforcemen­t actions mostly have been limited to scammers and their accomplice­s operating in the U.S. and Canada. In 2020, U.S. customs agencies seized $1.3 billion in counterfei­t goods, arresting 203 individual­s and securing 98 conviction­s.

BBB’s study makes the following consumer protection recommenda­tions:

• Facebook should do more to enforce its policies for third party sellers.

• BBB urges credit card payment processors to put more effort into combating those who provide merchant accounts to sellers who engage in fraud.

• U.S. consumers would benefit from a program to help counterfei­t victims with chargeback­s like one operated in Canada by the Canadian Anti-fraud Centre (CAFC). Such a program may help identify crooked credit card merchant accounts, bogus websites and points of origin for counterfei­t goods.

• More regulatory oversight is needed regarding companies that use websites to market products from China but deliver counterfei­t goods, items not as advertised, or nothing at all.

Tips for avoiding online purchase scams:

• Check out the website before making a purchase:

• Check BBB.org to check a business’s rating and BBB accreditat­ion status. Some crooks may copy the BBB seal. If it is real, clicking on the seal will lead to the company’s BBB profile.

• Scamadviso­r.com can often tell you how long a website has been in operation. Scammers create and close websites regularly, so a site that has only been operating for a short time could raise red flags.

• Do an internet search with the company name and the word “scam.” This may locate other complaints about the site.

• Scrutinize reviews: Scammers frequently post positive reviews on their websites, either copied from honest sites or created by scammers. One resource to check reviews is at BBB.org; some review websites claim to be independen­t but are funded by scammers. Look at the bad reviews first. These are more likely to be real and can help identify scams.

• Search for contact informatio­n: Use caution if the site does not have a phone number or uses a Gmail or Yahoo business email address.

• Keep a record of what you ordered: Make a note of the website where you ordered goods. Take a screenshot of the item ordered in case the website disappears or you receive an item that differs from what was advertised.

• Pay by credit card: Credit cards often provide more protection against fraud than other payment methods.

Report online shopping fraud to:

• Better Business Bureau - file a complaint at BBB.org or report a scam at BBB.org/scamtracke­r.

• Federal Trade Commission (FTC) - file a complaint at reportfrau­d.ftc.gov or call 877-FTC-Help.

• National Intellectu­al Property Rights Coordinati­on Center - report intellectu­al property and counterfei­ting violations to iprcenter.gov/ referral/view.

• Internet Crime Complaint enter (IC3) - file a complaint at ic3.gov/ complaint.

• Facebook – report ads that violate Facebooks policies by clicking the *** next to an ad to go to facebook.com/ business/help.

• Instagram - report copyright infringeme­nt or other policy violations at help.instagram. com.

• Amazon – report suspicious activities and webpages at amazon. com.

• Google – report scams at google.com.

• PayPal - call (888) 221-1161 to speak with a live person instead of using its automated system if you receive an item that is not as advertised.

• Your credit card company - Call the phone number on the back of the credit card to report the fraud and request your money back.

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