Read on to find out what these emails look like and how to avoid these scams.
AVG Antivirus emails
Emails claiming to be from AVG Antivirus tell you that your ‘AVG subscription has expired’ and that ‘you run the risk of viruses and malware.’ They also offer an 80% or 90% ‘renewal discount’ and give you a short deadline to claim this.
You’re then prompted to scan a QR code or follow a dodgy link labelled ‘renew now.’
After following the link, you’re taken to the official AVG website. While this might seem strange, it means that the emails were most likely created and sent by a rogue affiliate.
We shared these emails, as well as the links within them with AVG and it told us that AVG will only send emails from the AVG.com domain or, in some cases, GenDigital.com.
AVG said: ‘Based on the links provided, these were a mix of affiliate and potential other scams. The scams identified as affiliates have been noted by our team. Per our policy, they have been removed from the platform and any potential commissions will not be paid.
‘Unfortunately, cybercriminals sometimes leverage trusted names to send fake emails designed to trick consumers and steal their money and personal information.’
Emails impersonating McAfee
An email with an attached ‘invoice’ claiming to be from McAfee tells you that your purchase and registration of McAfee is complete and prompts you to review the ‘amended agreement.’
The fake invoice begins ‘your payment to McAfee has been confirmed’ and asks you to call a number if you didn’t authorise the £799.99 fee.
A second email impersonating McAfee tells you to ‘protect your device from dangerous threats’ with an ‘exclusive’ ‘90% discount’ on your McAfee renewal. It prompts you to follow a QR code or link to take advantage of this ‘deal’, but this leads back to AVG’s official website.
Which? shared the emails with McAfee and it confirmed that the emails were not genuine.
Spotting, reducing and reporting scam emails
If you receive an email you’re suspicious about, don’t click on any links in it or reply to the message. Instead, look out for these signs:
If you do receive an email from a company you have an account with, contact them directly on a trusted number or log into your online account to verify the information in the email.
It may not be possible to stop every spam email, but when you receive a dodgy email in your inbox, you should mark it as 'spam'. Doing this should encourage more of these emails to divert straight to your junk folder.
You can also report emails to your email provider - select the ‘report spam’ on Gmail, the ‘report phishing’ button on Hotmail and send scam emails to abuse@yahoo.com if you use a Yahoo account.
You can report fraudulent messages and scams impersonating McAfee to scam@mcafee.com.
undefinedsource https://www.which.co.uk/news/article/scam-alert-antivirus-scam-emails-targeting-your-inbox-ajwHE8o6ccgo