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10 Internet Frauds
October 2008
The Internet has spawned a whole
new lexicon and brought the world to your living room, 24/7/365.
And while the opportunities online for consumers are almost endless,
there are some challenges, too. As in dot con.
Con artists have gone high-tech, using the Internet
to defraud consumers in a variety of clever ways. Whether they're
using the excitement of an Internet auction to entice consumers
into parting with their money, applying new technology to peddle
traditional business opportunity scams, using email to reach vast
numbers of people with false promises about earnings through day
trading, or hijacking consumers' modems and cramming hefty long-distance
charges onto their phone bills, scam artists are just a click away.
Fortunately, law enforcement is on the cyber-case.
Using complaints to Consumer Sentinel, a consumer fraud database,
as their guide, law enforcement officials have identified the top
10 dot cons facing consumers who surf the Internet, as well as many
of the fraudsters behind them. In addition to putting many online
con artists out of business, the Federal Trade Commission, the nation's
chief consumer protection agency, wants consumers to know how not
to get caught in their web.
According to the FTC, here's what online consumers
are complaining about most:
Internet
Auctions
- The Bait: Shop in a "virtual marketplace" that offers a huge selection of products at great deals.
- The Catch: After sending their money, consumers
say they've received an item that is less valuable than promised,
or, worse yet, nothing at all.
- The Safety Net: When bidding through an Internet
auction, particularly for a valuable item, check out the seller
and insist on paying with a credit card or using an escrow service.
Internet
Access Services
- The Bait: Free money, simply for cashing a check.
- The Catch: Consumers say they've been "trapped" into long-term contracts for Internet access or another web service,
with big penalties for cancellation or early termination.
- The Safety Net: If a check arrives at your home
or business, read both sides carefully and look inside the envelope
to find the conditions you're agreeing to if you cash the check.
Read your phone bill carefully for unexpected or unauthorized charges.
Credit
Card Fraud
- The Bait: Surf the Internet and view adult images
online for free, just for sharing your credit card number to prove
you're over 18.
- The Catch: Consumers say that fraudulent promoters
have used their credit card numbers to run up charges on their cards.
- The Safety Net: Share credit card information only
when buying from a company you trust. Dispute unauthorized charges
on your credit card bill by complaining to the bank that issued
the card. Federal law limits your liability to $50 in charges if
your card is misused.
International
Modem Dialing
- The Bait: Get free access to adult material and
pornography by downloading a "viewer" or "dialer" computer program.
- The Catch: Consumers complained about exorbitant
long-distance charges on their phone bill. Through the program,
their modem is disconnected, then reconnected to the Internet through
an international long-distance number.
- The Safety Net: Don't download any program to access
a so-called "free" service without reading all the disclosures
carefully for cost information. Just as important, read your phone
bill carefully and challenge any charges you didn't authorize or
don't understand.
Web
Cramming
- The Bait: Get a free custom-designed website for
a 30-day trial period, with no obligation to continue.
- The Catch: Consumers say they've been charged on
their telephone bills or received a separate invoice, even if they
never accepted the offer or agreed to continue the service after
the trial period.
- The Safety Net: Review your telephone bills and
challenge any charges you don't recognize.
Multilevel
Marketing Plans/ Pyramids
- The Bait: Make money through the products and services
you sell as well as those sold by the people you recruit into the
program.
- The Catch: Consumers say that they've bought into
plans and programs, but their customers are other distributors,
not the general public. Some multi-level marketing programs are
actually illegal pyramid schemes. When products or services are
sold only to distributors like yourself, there's no way to make
money.
- The Safety Net: Avoid plans that require you to
recruit distributors, buy expensive inventory or commit to a minimum
sales volume.
Travel
and Vacation
- The Bait: Get a luxurious trip with lots of "extras" at a bargain-basement price.
- The Catch: Consumers say some companies deliver
lower-quality accommodations and services than they've advertised
or no trip at all. Others have been hit with hidden charges or additional
requirements after they've paid.
- The Safety Net: Get references on any travel company
you're planning to do business with. Then, get details of the trip
in writing, including the cancellation policy, before signing on.
Business
Opportunities
-
The Bait: Be your own boss and earn big bucks.
- The Catch: Taken in by promises about potential
earnings, many consumers have invested in a "biz op" that
turned out to be a "biz flop." There was no evidence to
back up the earnings claims.
- The Safety Net: Talk to other people who started
businesses through the same company, get all the promises in writing,
and study the proposed contract carefully before signing. Get an
attorney or an accountant to take a look at it, too.
Investments
- The Bait: Make an initial investment in a day trading
system or service and you'll quickly realize huge returns.
- The Catch: Big profits always mean big risk. Consumers
have lost money to programs that claim to be able to predict the
market with 100 percent accuracy.
- The Safety Net: Check out the promoter with state
and federal securities and commodities regulators, and talk to other
people who invested through the program to find out what level of
risk you're assuming.
Health
Care Products/Services
- The Bait: Items not sold through traditional suppliers
are "proven" to cure serious and even fatal health problems.
- The Catch: Claims for "miracle" products
and treatments convince consumers that their health problems can
be cured. But people with serious illnesses who put their hopes
in these offers might delay getting the health care they need.
- The Safety Net: Consult a health care professional
before buying any "cure-all" that claims to treat a wide
range of ailments or offers quick cures and easy solutions to serious
illnesses.
Can you avoid getting caught by a scam artist
working the web? Not always. But prudence pays. The FTC offers these
tips to help you avoid getting caught by an offer that just may
not click:
- Be wary of extravagant claims about performance
or earnings potential. Get all promises in writing and review
them carefully before making a payment or signing a contract.
- Read the fine print and all relevant links.
Fraudulent promoters sometimes bury the disclosures they're not
anxious to share by putting them in teeny-tiny type or in a place
where you're unlikely see them.
- Look for a privacy policy. If you don't see
one - or if you can't understand it - consider taking your business
elsewhere.
- Be skeptical of any company that doesn't
clearly state its name, street address and telephone number. Check
it out with the local Better Business Bureau, consumer protection
office or state Attorney General.
From http://www.ftc.gov/bcp/conline/pubs/online/dotcons.htm
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