Better Business Bureau: Top Scams of 2018
Employment scams were the riskiest scams in 2018, according to
the latest report from the Better Business Bureau, Tech-Savvy
Scammers Work to Con More Victims: 2018 BBB Scam Tracker Risk Report (BBB.org/RiskReport). Employment
scams had more instances and higher losses than in previous years when it
ranked the third riskiest. The report is based on data supplied by consumers
to BBB Scam TrackerSM (BBB.org/ScamTracker) and is based on
the BBB Risk Index, a unique algorithm that calculates exposure,
susceptibility, and monetary loss to offer a more accurate assessment of scam
risk.
“This was a surprise,” said Melissa Lanning Trumpower,
executive director of the BBB Institute for Marketplace Trust, which produced
the report. “It’s the first time since we began this report three years ago
that one scam dominated across so many demographic subgroups. It was the
riskiest scam in three of the six age groups, and for both men and women. It
was also the riskiest scam for military families and veterans, and students.”
Digging into the Risk Report shows one possible answer: Amazon
was in the news a lot in 2018 with its high profile search for a second
headquarters. It was also the 6th most impersonated
organization mentioned in BBB Scam Tracker reports, after not even making the
top 15 in previous years. In 2017, only 24 BBB Scam Tracker reports were
employment scams that mentioned Amazon. In 2018, that jumped to 564.
“Scammers are opportunists,” says Trumpower. “Whatever is in
the news or being talked about on social media, they see as an opening to
imposter a recognizable and respected organization or brand.” The Internal
Revenue Service is the leading impersonated organization, and other
government agencies together rank second. Other leading brands that scammers
impersonate include Publishers Clearing House, Microsoft, Apple… and the
Better Business Bureau.
Amazon, a BBB Accredited Business, has only one authorized job
application site:amazon.jobs. Any other link is a
scam, said Trumpower.
“Employment scams are particularly egregious because they prey
on people who are already feeling pinched and may be desperate for work,” she
said. “If the scam gets far enough, scammers collect the same information
that real employers do – address, birth date, Social Security number, bank
account – everything needed for identity theft.”
The ten riskiest scams of 2018 were: employment, online
purchase, fake checks/money orders, home improvement, advance fee loans,
romance, tech support, investment, travel/vacation, and government grant.
In the Midwest, this was the breakdown of the top scams:
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