We’ve found lots of scams this week in which scammers impersonate famous brands, including Amazon Prime Day, DHL, USPS, CVS, and Louis Vuitton. Would you have been able to spot all these scams?
Impersonating trusted brands, and under a variety of pretenses, scammers love to spread phishing links via text message or email that lead to phishing sites designed to steal your personally identifiable information (PII): bank log-in details, email address, Social Security number, credit card number, and more. With your PII, scammers can commit other crimes, such as identity theft!
Most commonly, the phishing sites will be disguised as fake log-in pages, where scammers can record your log-in credentials and other data. In other instances, scammers will take you to fake online survey forms, with the same goal of deceiving you.
Amazon Prime Day is coming on July 11 – 12 this year, and scammers are ready with a bunch of fake text messages as well as other bogus materials with which to trick you. This week, we’ve seen scammers promoting fake Amazon Prime Day campaigns via text messages:
The link leads to an online form that guarantees you free Amazon products:
If you proceed with the website and submit personal information, scammers can record it all and use it to commit crime. Be careful!
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Besides shopping sites, one of the most common tactics scammers use is to pose as delivery companies and send fake package notifications. Below are some examples.
DHL is one of the most impersonated delivery companies in phishing attempts, and we’ve reported on it many times before. Falsely claiming that you need to pay for an order, scammers instruct you to click on the attached malicious link:
The link will take you to a fake DHL page that requires you to submit credit card credentials to “pay” for the delivery fee. Don’t do it! There will be NO packages delivered, and scammers can steal all the information you’ve entered and use it for their own profit:
Another delivery service, USPS, is also often used in phishing attempts. Sending fake text notifications, scammer try to convince you that you need to update your delivery details to get a “suspended” package:
Again, that attached phishing link will take you to a fake USPS page (normally a fake tracking page), which aims to collect your personal information. You already know what will happen next: don’t fall for it!
Last year we wrote about fake CVS texts and emails, and this week there’s a new wave of CVS phishing attempts:
Featuring “in-store credit” as the prize of an online survey, the fake texts prompt you to click on the attached phishing link that leads to a fake CVS Pharmacy survey form. As we’ve stressed multiple times, everything you typed and sent via that form will end up in scammers’ hands. Watch out!
“Limited Time Offer: Louis Vuitton Bags for Just $149 – Shop Now!” Does that sound too good to be true? It absolutely is! We found that scammers, as usual, are posing as Louis Vuitton and sending fake sales campaigns via email this week:
The link in the email will lead to a fake Louis Vuitton online shop that features all kinds of crazy discounts — don’t shop on this site!
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This article was published in collaboration with Trend Micro.
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