Last week I was under attack., and it was completely my own doing. I nearly fell victim to two separate and independent scams. And while I pride myself on recognizing and avoiding these things (perhaps too much, given these situations), it just shows you how anyone can be manipulated.
Let’s talk about the one involving a major sale of Taschen art books. You have seen these coffee table beauties, they typically are quite expensive and cover a wide range of art (including movies and art posters). There was an ad running through my Facebook feed (a sample shown below) that promised all sorts of things, such as “to make room for new editions and updated print runs, we’re clearing a limited selection of archive titles from our warehouse.” Clicking on the ad’s “Shop Now” buttons brought you to an attractively designed page that showed book covers and sale prices that were around $5 a book. There were several warning signs that I ignored, because I was so excited about getting some bargain books: First, paltry descriptions. Second, the domain was a .shop one that didn’t seem to have any relationship with any Taschen brand itself. And the FAQ page looked like it had been written with AI, certainly not on the level of quality that I knew this publishing house was known for.
Now, you can find these books in many used book stores, and they go for at least $25 a piece . But I was blinded by the bargains and so I proceeded to order three books. With shipping, it came to about $30 total. Enter my credit card, and wait — the card was rejected. The name of the vendor was khdfaienceflume. The company was based in Hong Kong, and the purchase was originally in HK$. Okay, something phishy here. I went back and looked up the domain, where I found it was registered a week ago. (Big red flag.) Taschen is based in Germany, btw. So i was saved by my credit card company’s fraud screen. I should have seen these warning signs, and should have followed the cardinal rule: if someone is selling something so cheap that is too good to be true, it probably is.
My second scam was a lot more involved, and it took me a week to figure it out. I got an email from Deven saying that “he was on Spotify and came across my2023 podcast interview.” He claimed to be able to help place me with interviews on other “big-name podcasts,” and mentioned the names of some of his clients that he has helped in the past. None of the names meant anything to me, but I figured what the heck and booked some time with him the following week. All seemed on the up and up until I started getting more than a dozen messages and texts suggesting that I watch some of his promotional hints and tips to making more money doing podcasts, leading up to the day of our eventual virtual meeting. I was starting to get annoyed, but I was eager to hear more about his “sure fire methods.”
Again, I was blinded by the “make money fast” message and missed a few of the cues: some slight misspellings in his messages, the lack of any actual pricing for his services (other than hints that he was expensive), and a failure to check out any of the “big name” clients. I actually connected to the pre-arranged meeting but Deven was a no-show. Then I started investigating: After checking into his clients’ websites, they all shared a common thread: they make a lot of money, they don’t show pricing, and they also don’t have contact info. It all was an elaborate hoax. (You can see a partial screenshot of one of these clients here.) All of the clients had very attractive websites that reflected a lot of time to create their own testimonials and detailed strategies on how they can help you “earn seven figures.” Yeah, right.
I am not sure how Deven was going to get my money, but once again, a major fail.
So: take a moment before you get sucked into the phishing vortex. And let my experiences in Scamville be a potent lesson to you. I n the meantime, I guess I am back to browsing the used book stores in person too.
Greed is a terrible thing.
I had a similar ad – I think on Instagram? – right around Christmas or the first of the year. It was a Dick’s Sporting Goods ad advertising some clearance prices on Reebok shoes (I think). They were normally $130 on sale for $30. I clicked the link and was taken to a Dick’s branded page that looked legit until I looked at the URL – it was not Dick’s!
Thanks for sharing your experience, David. The scams are definitely getting more elaborate and fooling people with “cyber smarts”. I too clicked on an add on Instagram, I think it was about an exercise device, only to get blocked at the checkout page. Luckily my phone security flagged it, but I could have definitely been scammed.
Really enjoy reading your newsletter 🙂
First rule… Never never trust anything in FB…face shit….full of spams…I know because I am the ones doing the spamming..
So is X and reddit
You can clone a website with just using AI….that what I am doing.
Bookman this
https://bullshitwebsites.com/
Will save you from scam
BullShitWebsites.com – Websites (humans too) that provide useless garbage BS info, fake news and trying to sell you something that you don’t need and always enticing you to spend more money! Time Waster Websites!! Fake Fraud Websites that steal your info- Is your website the useless BullShitWebsite? I bet it is!!—a family that shits together stays together
Opps.. bookmark this…
Just stick to Amazon.com and you will be fine…good return policy