The 5 most common coronavirus scams still circulating
Here are their email subject lines, plus background about what the messages contain. Don't fall for them.
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As Adam mentioned yesterday, they say you should never let a crisis go to waste—and scammers are taking that advice to heart.
Crooks are using the coronavirus pandemic as a springboard for all sorts of money-swindling schemes. They’re peddling overpriced masks, fake charities, and misinformation. One enterprising fraudster even tried to sell the world’s tallest statue, a towering monument—almost twice the size of the Statue of Liberty—in Gujarat, India, claiming the funds would go to pandemic relief efforts. (Presumably, the Brooklyn Bridge was already off the market.)
Coalitions of scam-squashers are, thankfully, taking on the scoundrels. One such initiative, the COVID-19 Cyber Threat Coalition, has more than 3,000 participants and counts companies such as workplace messenger Slack, code-sharing site Github, and chip-designer NVIDIA as sponsors. The alliance was started by Sophos, a British cybersecurity firm that just last month was acquired by Thoma Bravo, a Chicago-based private equity firm, for nearly $4 billion.
Marc Rogers, co-leader of another coronavirus threat league, which I profiled last week, describes these disparate efforts as “like different units or battalions from the same army.” Their goal: Beat back the thieves.
Baddies’ tactics are evolving. Chester Wisniewski, Sophos’s principal research scientist, says the last time he could recall as many crisis-related scams was in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina. At that time, Wisniewski says, scammers tended to exploit search engine optimization techniques to get newly created, malicious websites prominent rankings on Google, thereby luring and duping people searching for information online.
“That’s not impossible but you don’t see as much of it anymore,” Wisniewski says, noting that Google has gotten a lot better at delisting fraudulent sites in the 15 years since Katrina. Nowadays, he says, “every lure pretty much starts with email.”
Wisniewski shared a selection of his team’s findings with Fortune. I’ve culled his list down to the five most common email scams which were still circulating as of April 3.
Here are their email subject lines, plus background about what the messages contain. Don’t fall for them.
- “Feeling helpless against corona?” and “forget a vaccine for corona” and “corona worse than ebola?” These scam emails open by noting that “Gwenith [sic] Paltrow and Kate Hudson have both taken selfies wearing the mask N95.” The message proceeds to say these masks do not protect people’s eyes from sneeze-propelled pathogens. “What can you rely on? Only this,” the author says, linking to a webpage selling supposedly protective eyewear.
- “The mask that can prevent coronavirus now” and “coronavirus is spreading, this specialized mask can control it” These emails advertise masks branded as “OxyBreath Pro.” The message says, misleadingly, “here is how you can protect yourself from getting sick form [sic] airborne diseases.” It’s spam.
- “Corona is spinning out of control…” This email ultimately asks people to pay to download a scammy video. “The stupidest thing you can do right now is rely on your government/big pharma to protect you,” the message admonishes. It continues, “If you don’t want your children ripped from you”—as the note falsely claim is being done in Wuhan, China—”you MUST watch this urgent video.”
- “The 3 plants you need to throw in your shopping cart to fight coronavirus” This email purports to sell a book of “natural remedies” that can “fight viruses, including coronavirus.” The sender says that “there is a huge rush to buy this book right now” and “if you can act fast, you might still find a copy reserved in your name.” Yeah, right.
- “Top 10 best coronavirus prepper gear” This email opens asking, “Are You Prepared To Survive The Pandemic?” It proceeds to urge people to buy so-called prepper gear “that you must keep at hand to tackle any emergency situation effectively and keep yourself protected.” Buyer beware.
If you come across any of these scams—or variations, as they’re bound to evolve—be skeptical. When in doubt, send it to the junk folder and let your friends and family to be on the lookout too. (For a more comprehensive list of scams, check out this helpful advisory from the Federal Trade Commission.)
“These criminals have no line in the sand and will not allow an opportunity to profit off of our fear pass them by,” Wisniewski says. “Sending your money to people exploiting this crisis will only make things worse.”
Robert Hackett
Twitter: @rhhackett
Email: robert.hackett@fortune.com