2 new Facebook scams could steal your personal information
Two new Facebook scams are out for your money and could put a virus on your computer, as first reported on HLNTV.com.The first is a scam that promises to give you a free iPhone 6. Yes, it sounds too good to be true and it is.
The scam first shows up as a shared post. Users who click it are taken to a Facebook fan page where they are asked two do three things. The first is to “like” the page and the second is to share the page with your friends so they can enter the contest too. Sharing the page spreads the scam to your friends.
Then to get your free iPhone, you’re taken to a different website, and that’s where the real trouble begins. That external site tells you to fill out a quick survey to get your free iPhone, but if you fill it out, you instead sign yourself up for services you likely don’t want.
“Some of the available surveys want you to provide your mobile phone number, ostensibly to go in the draw for extra prizes or offers. But by submitting your number, you will actually be subscribing to a very expensive text-messaging “service” that will charge you several dollars every time it sends you a message,” reports Hoax-Slayer.com.
The scam also takes your name, address and other personal information which it then sells to third-party marketers to send you junk mail and annoying phone calls.
The second scam involves a fake video that’s being shared across Facebook titled “Girl killed by husband just because she kissed another man.”
The video seems to show an Asian woman about to get her head chopped off with a sword, and it looks like tons of people have already liked and shared the video.
But if you come across it, DO NOT CLICK ON IT. The video, the comments, the shares and the likes are all fake.
If you do click on the video, you’re taken to a third-party website that looks like Facebook but it isn’t. Once you try to play the video, you’re first told to share it with your friends (which spread the scam) and then claims you need to install a plugin for the video to work on your computer.
“When clicking on the install button, users end up downloading an executable file on their computers, which drops adware or malicious code, depending on their luck,” the blog Hot For Security explains.
The easiest way to avoid these scams:
Don’t complete Facebook surveys claiming to offer something for fee
Don’t share or “like” websites in order to view a video
Don’t install updates and plugins via viral videos