Social media fraud is fraud conducted through social media websites. While social media's primary functions include sharing, learning, interacting, and marketing, its inherent popularity has made it a prime hunting ground for scammers.
One out of four scam victims claim the scam started with a social media direct message (DM), an ad, or a social media post.
How to quickly identify a scammer on social media
A random / unsolicited direct messages (DMs) message with a link (to trick you into visiting a fake / phishing websites or downloading a malware on your device
The messages include a lot of grammar and spelling errors
A brand-new social media profile with little content or few friends
The profile belongs to someone, you are already connected as a friend
Request to send money online for an emergency or urgent purpose
Promise of abnormally high returns on investment with them
Posts or ads promoting a deal or sale that seem too good to be true
High paying job offers without need for commensurate qualification or experience
The person insists on taking the conversation off social media & asks you to call / text them
Top Social Media Scams
Investment returns and cryptocurrency scams
Job scams on social media
Gift offers, Lottery, Sweepstakes, and Giveaway scams
Authentication code (OTP / password) scams
Social media ads promoting fake deals or fake online sites
How To Stay Safe and Avoid social media scams:
Never respond or click on pop-up messages, calls or links from unknown sources.
Don’t give out your personal or confidential banking information.
Adjust your social media privacy settings to ensure your posts are not visible to strangers.
Don’t respond to strangers messaging you on social media.
Create strong, unique passwords for each of your social media accounts.