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Spam Scams
Quick Facts
Some email users have lost money to bogus offers that arrived as spam in their in-box. Con artists are very
cunning; they know how to make their claims seem legitimate. Some spam messages ask for your business, others
invite you to a website with a detailed pitch. Either way, these tips can help you avoid spam scams:
Protect your personal information. Share credit card or other personal information only when you're buying from a
company you know and trust.
Know who you're dealing with. Don't do business with any company that won't provide its name, street address, and
telephone number.
Take your time. Resist any urge to ,despite the offer and the terms. Once you turn over your money, you may never
get it back.
Read the small print. Get all promises in writing and review them carefully before you make a payment or sign a
contract.
Never pay for a gift. Disregard any offer that asks you to pay for a gift or prize. If it's free or a gift, you
shouldn't have to pay for it. Free means free.
Filter Tips: 10 Scams to Screen from Your Email
The Email Scam
Phishing
Work-at-Home Scams
Weight Loss Claims
Foreign Lotteries
Cure-All Products
Check Overpayment Scams
Pay-in-Advance Credit Offers
Debt Relief
Investment Schemes
While some consumers find unsolicited commercial email informative, others find it annoying and time consuming.
Still others find it expensive: They're among the people who have lost money to spam that contained bogus offers
and fraudulent promotions.
Many Internet Service Providers and manufacturers offer filtering software to limit the spam in their users' email
inboxes. In addition, some old-fashioned filter tips' can help you save time and money by avoiding frauds pitched
in email.
Here's how to spot 10 common spam scams:
1. The Email Scam
The Bait: Con artists claim to be officials, businesspeople, or the surviving spouses of former government honchos
in Nigeria or another country whose money is somehow tied up for a limited time. They offer to transfer lots of
money into your bank account if you will pay a fee or to help them access their money. If you respond to the
initial offer, you may receive documents that look Then they ask you to send money to cover transaction and
transfer costs and attorney's fees, as well as blank letterhead, your bank account numbers, or other information.
They may even encourage you to travel to Nigeria or a border country to complete the transaction. Some fraudsters
have even produced trunks of dyed or stamped money to verify their claims.
The Catch: The emails are from crooks trying to steal your money or perpetrate identity theft. Inevitably,
emergencies come up, requiring more of your money and delaying the of funds to your account; in the end, there
aren't any profits for you, and the scam artist vanishes with your money. According to State Department reports,
people who have responded to solicitations have been beaten, subjected to threats and extortion, and in some cases,
murdered.
Your Safety Net: If you receive an email from someone claiming to need your help getting money out of a foreign
country, don't respond.
2. Phishing
The Bait: Email or pop-up messages that claim to be from a business or organization you may deal with say, an
Internet service provider (ISP), bank, online payment service, or even a government agency. The message may ask you
to your account information or face dire consequences.
The Catch: Phishing is a scam where Internet fraudsters send spam or pop-up messages to reel in personal and
financial information from unsuspecting victims. The messages direct you to a website that looks just like a
legitimate organization's site. But it's a bogus site that exists simply to trick you into divulging your personal
information so the operators can steal it, fake your identity, and run up bills or commit crimes in your name.
Your Safety Net: Make it a policy never to respond to email or pop-up messages that ask for your personal or
financial information, or click on links in the message. Don't cut and paste a link from the message into your Web
browser, either: Phishers can make links look like they go one place, but then actually take you to a look-alike
site. If you are concerned about your account, contact the organization using a phone number you know to be
genuine, or open a new Internet browser session and type in the company's correct Web address yourself. Using
anti-virus software and a firewall, and keeping them up to date, can help.
3. Work-at-Home Scams
The Bait: Advertisements that promise steady income for minimal labor in medical claims processing,
envelope-stuffing, craft assembly work, or other jobs. The ads use similar come-ons: Fast cash. Minimal work. No
risk. And the advantage of working from home when it's convenient for you.
The Catch: The ads don't say you may have to work many hours without pay, or pay hidden costs to place newspaper
ads, make photocopies, or buy supplies, software, or equipment to do the job. Once you put in your own time and
money, you're likely to find promoters who refuse to pay you, claiming that your work isn't up to their quality
standards.Your Safety Net: The FTC has yet to find anyone who has gotten rich stuffing envelopes or assembling
magnets at home. Legitimate work-at-home business promoters should tell you exactly what's involved in the program
they're selling. Before you commit any money, find out what tasks you will have to perform, whether you will be
paid a salary or work on commission, who will pay you, when you will get your first paycheck, the total cost of the
program including supplies, equipment and membership fees and what you will get for your money. Can you verify
information from current workers? Be aware of people who are paid to lie and give you every reason to pay for work.
Get professional advice from a lawyer, an accountant, a financial advisor, or another expert if you need it, and
check out the company with your local consumer protection agency, state Attorney General and the Better Business
Bureau, not only where the company is located, but also where you live.
4. Weight Loss Claims
The Bait: Emails promising a revolutionary pill, patch, cream, or other product that will result in weight loss
without diet or exercise. Some products claim to block the absorption of fat, carbs, or calories; others guarantee
permanent weight loss; still others suggest you'll lose lots of weight at lightening speed.
The Catch: These are gimmicks, playing on your sense of hopefulness. There's nothing available through email you
can wear or apply to your skin that can cause permanent or even significant weight loss.
Your Safety Net: Experts agree that the best way to lose weight is to eat fewer calories and increase your physical
activity so you burn more energy. A reasonable goal is to lose about a pound a week. For most people, that means
cutting about 500 calories a day from your diet, eating a variety of nutritious foods, and exercising regularly.
Permanent weight loss happens with permanent lifestyle changes. Talk to your health care provider about a nutrition
and exercise program suited to your lifestyle and metabolism.
5. Foreign Lotteries
The Bait: Emails boasting enticing odds in foreign lotteries. You may even get a message claiming you've already
won! You just have to pay to get your prize or collect your winnings.
The Catch: Most promotions for foreign lotteries are phony. The scammers will keep any money you send for or fees.
In addition, lottery hustlers use victims' bank account numbers to make unauthorized withdrawals or their credit
card numbers to run up additional charges.
Your Safety Net: Skip these offers. Don't send money now on the promise of a pay-off later.
6. Cure-All Products
The Bait: Emails claiming that a product is a scientific breakthrough, or a quick and effective cure for a wide
variety of ailments or diseases. They generally announce limited availability, and require payment in advance, and
offer a no-risk Case histories or testimonials by consumers or doctors claiming amazing results are not
uncommon.
The Catch: There is no product or dietary supplement available via email that can make good on its claims to shrink
tumors, cure insomnia, cure impotency, treat Alzheimer's disease, and prevent severe memory loss. These kinds of
claims deal with the treatment of diseases; companies that want to make claims like these must follow the FDA's
pre-market testing and review process required for new drugs.
Your Safety Net: When evaluating health-related claims, be skeptical. Consult a health care professional before
buying any that claims to treat a wide range of ailments or offers quick cures and easy solutions to serious
illnesses. Generally speaking, cure all is cure none.
7. Cheque Overpayment Scams
The Bait: A response to your ad or online auction posting, offering to pay with a cashier's, personal, or corporate
cheque. At the last minute, the so-called buyer (or the buyer's ) comes up with a reason for writing the cheque for
more than the purchase price, and asks you to wire back the difference after you deposit the check.
The Catch: If you deposit the cheque, you lose. Typically, the cheques are counterfeit, but they're good enough to
fool unsuspecting bank tellers; when they bounce, you are liable for the entire amount.
Your Safety Net: Don't accept a cheque for more than your selling price, no matter how tempting the plea or
convincing the story. Ask the buyer to write the cheque for the purchase price. If the buyer sends the incorrect
amount, return the cheque. Don't send the merchandise. As a seller who accepts payment by cheque, you may ask for a
cheque drawn on a local bank, or a bank with a local branch. That way, you can visit personally to make sure the
cheque is valid. If that's not possible, call the bank the cheque was drawn on using the phone number from
directory assistance or an Internet site that you know and trust, not from the person who gave you the cheque. Ask
if the cheque is valid.
8. Pay-in-Advance Credit Offers
The Bait: News that you've been to get a low-interest loan or credit card, or repair your bad credit even though
banks have turned you down. But to take advantage of the offer, you have to ante up a processing fee of several
hundred dollars.
The Catch: A legitimate pre-qualified offer means you've been selected to apply. You still have to complete an
application and you can still be turned down. If you paid a fee in advance for the promise of a loan or credit
card, you've been hustled. There may be a list of lenders, but there's no loan, and the person you've paid has
taken your money and run.
Your Safety Net: Don't pay for a promise. Legitimate lenders never a card or loan before you apply. They may
require that you pay application, appraisal, or credit report fees, but these fees seldom are required before the
lender is identified and the application is completed. In addition, the fees generally are paid to the lender, not
to the broker or person who arranged the loan.
9. Debt Relief
The Bait: Emails touting a way you can consolidate your bills into one monthly payment without borrowing; stop
credit harassment, foreclosures, repossessions, tax levies and garnishments; or wipe out your debts.
The Catch: These offers often involve bankruptcy proceedings, but rarely say so. While bankruptcy is one way to
deal with serious financial problems, it's generally considered the option of last resort. The reason: it has a
long-term negative impact on your creditworthiness. A bankruptcy stays on your credit report for 10 years, and can
hinder your ability to get credit, a job, insurance, or even a place to live. To top it off, you will likely be
responsible for attorneys' fees for bankruptcy proceedings.
Your Safety Net: Read between the lines when looking at these emails. Before resorting to bankruptcy, talk with
your creditors about arranging a modified payment plan, contact a credit counseling service to help you develop a
debt repayment plan, or carefully consider a second mortgage or home equity line of credit. One caution: While a
home loan may allow you to consolidate your debt, it also requires your home as collateral. If you can't make the
payments, you could lose your home.
10. Investment Schemes
The Bait: Emails touting that promise high rates of return with little or no risk. One version seeks investors to
help form an offshore bank. Others are vague about the nature of the investment, and stress the rates of return.
Promoters hype their high-level financial connections; the fact that they're privy to inside information; that
they'll guarantee the investment; or that they'll buy it back. To close the deal, they often serve up phony
statistics, misrepresent the significance of a current event, or stress the unique quality of their offering.
The Catch: Many unsolicited schemes are a good investment for the promoters, but not for participants. Promoters of
fraudulent investments operate a particular scam for a short time, close down before they can be detected, and
quickly spend the money they take in. Often, they reopen under another name, selling another investment scam.
Your Safety Net: Take your time in evaluating the legitimacy of an offer: The higher the promised return, the
higher the risk. Don't let a promoter pressure you into committing to an investment before you are certain it's
legitimate. Hire your own lawyer or an accountant to take a look at any investment offer, too.
Fighting Back
Con artists are clever and cunning, constantly hatching new variations on age-old scams. Still, skeptical consumers
can spot questionable or unsavory promotions in email offers.
by - Nov 2008
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