How to Spot an Online Charity Scam
Social media sites such as Facebook have a
range of scams, one of the most recent being fake fundraising campaigns!
The scammers will make an emotional post,
provide their banking details and add a couple of sad comments as well. The
post will usually be a plea for help for a terminally ill child or to help an
animal rescue organization.
New scamming groups appear every month,
each with similar details and posts and even though they are shut down on a
regular basis, people still fall for the scam and pay money to the scammers
anyway.
How can you spot an online charity scam?
Age of the group. The fake charity group
will only be a few weeks old and contain barely any posts, but they have been
shared and reposted thousands of times. This is usually the first signs that
the charity is a scam! A real organization or charity will take a long period
of time to become established and there will be multiple posts as well as more
information about the cause.
Pressure to feel pity. Using shocking
videos and photos as well as lots of capitalized letters and exclamation points
will pressurize you into acting quickly and spontaneously. A real charity will
never resort to using these measures, because they are there to build
relationships, on the other hand, scammers just want to raise money for
themselves.
No supporting documentation. Scammer groups
will have little to no medical reports or records to prove their cause or
charity organization. And if they do have the documentation you should always
read through it thoroughly to make sure the details are the same as the assistance
they are asking for.
Responding to questions. It is not uncommon
for people who are concerned about someone’s health or wellbeing to ask the
people who created the group for information about the cause as well as updates
on the situation. If the group is a scam these questions will be ignored,
deleted or the user will be banned.
Websites. Sometimes links to a legitimate
website for the charity or cause are posted in the group, this is how scammers
will trick you into trusting them. This is to prove their legitimacy by showing
they have a website presence. The website it links to often looks real, but be
wary of inputting any of your personal information. Real charity foundations
will always post how they spend the money they have collected, if not, you
cannot trust that organization.
The desire to help others is great, but it
is best to always stop and think first instead of acting impulsively.
For assistance and more information about online scams, please contact OSINT on 021 110 0422 or email contact@osint.co.za
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