Scammers have already started luring Black Friday shoppers with scams involving gaming consoles such as PlayStation 5, and fake Amazon gift card generators that steal cryptocurrency.
Still a few weeks away, Black Friday is one the biggest shopping bonanzas, and as per Adobe Analytics saw sales of $9.03 billion last year, with 2021 expected to top that figure.
Given its popularity, Black Friday is also one of the favorite targets exploited by scammers to trick consumers.
“While online shopping towards Black Friday is fun and exciting, it also provides cyber criminals with ample opportunities to exploit and monetize a victim’s giving spirit and greed,” note cybersecurity sleuths at Fortinet while sharing a couple of scams that have already cropped up on their radar.
Too good to be true
Fortinet recently discovered a malicious executable, which they believe is pitched as a free Amazon gift card generator.
The file however placed a clipboard monitoring malware that keeps its eyes peeled for bitcoin wallet addresses that the victim has copied into the clipboard. It then replaces the wallet’s address with its own, hoping that the victim will not notice the altered wallet address when the victim pastes it during the transaction.
“Free generator of this sort has been around and scammed people for years. But given the market power of Amazon, this new scam is especially enticing,” note the researchers.
The other scam plays on the chip shortage induced difficulty in procuring new gaming consoles such as the PlayStation 5 and Xbox Series S and X consoles.
While the researchers couldn’t analyze the website for the scam, they share that scams such as these usually trick the user into visiting a cleverly disguised phishing page that gets them to share confidential information such as their credentials for online shopping sites, credit card numbers, home address, and more.
“Although these scams are not new, users should pay extra attention to the potential scams ahead of the Black Friday shopping spree…. If a discount or availability of a hard to find item seem too good to be true, think twice before making a purchase,” the researchers conclude.
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