5 scams you need to know about in 2024

Just when we think we've got a handle on scams, criminals enjoy wrongfooting us by finding new and nefarious ways to subvert modern life.

Read on to find out the latest lingo and how you might be targeted by scammers in 2024.

1. Spear phishing

You've almost certainly heard of phishing - where scammers trick you with a message or email purporting to be from a reputable bank, business or government body. But what's this about spear phishing?

The phrase describes a personally targeted phishing attempt, in which fraudsters use your own information - compromised at an earlier stage - to convince you they are a trusted organisation you normally transact with.

Learn:

2. Tapjacking

This bizarrely named scam will trick you into clicking and performing actions on your phone or device without even realising it.

It works by showing you an overlay, which you think is clickable - but it's not. It's just a false screen designed to obscure the thing you're actually clicking on.

For example, you may think you're playing a skill-based mobile game, but the gaming elements on screen are just a cover. Far from earning points in the game, your clicks are actually being applied to an invisible screen beneath, where you're unwittingly making in-app purchases or being signed up to a rolling monthly subscription.

  • To minimise the risk of falling victim to this scam, only install apps from reputable app stores such as App Store or Google Play Store, and read user reviews before downloading.
  • 3. Quishing

    But as with anything, they've been exploited by cybercriminals to deceive victims into using copycat sites. This con is known as 'quishing', or QR phishing.

    The criminals have cottoned on to the fact that we tend to assume such codes are genuine and scan them without a second thought.

    4. AI & deepfake

    It's an election year, not only in the UK but in more than 40 countries around the world. As more than half the world's population goes to the polls, the incentives for bad actors to misuse artificial intelligence (AI) have never been higher.

    In January, the Guardian reported on the discovery of more than 100 'deepfake' videos on Facebook impersonating Rishi Sunak. The phoney clips reportedly led to webpages mocked up to look like a BBC news article which promoted an investment scam.

    Facebook and Instagram's parent company Meta has now said it will detect and label all AI images so ordinary users know that what they're seeing isn't real. 

    Read

    5. Ads on online platforms

    Yet those laws are not yet in force, and our latest investigation in the March 2024 edition of Which? magazine found blatant examples of scam ads, showing little has changed so far.

    One such example was an ad imitating electronics retailer Currys and offering an improbable 90% off to Black Friday shoppers.

    Learn:

    source https://www.which.co.uk/news/article/5-scams-you-need-to-know-about-in-2024-ahSpn1K1QAE9
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