Beware Of Fake Car Auctions On Facebook
The email was a painful one, but there
was nothing I could do about it. The sender said he had wanted to buy an
imported ‘tokunbo’ car and while checking online to see what the online
car portals had to offer, he stumbled on a Facebook post by a
‘uniformed Custom official’ saying there was a massive clearance sales
of seized cars by the Nigerian Customs Service.
After paying the processing fee and 20
per cent of the amount, the phone number of the ‘custom officer’ was no
more available. He had vanished into thin air. The individual probably
used the picture of a custom official he got from a calendar or on the
Internet and had pretended to be someone else.
This is an age-long scam but most people
never notice this trap until they try to buy a car. As far back as 2012,
the Cable News Network had reported that 83 million of the 955 million
monthly active users on Facebook worldwide use duplicate or false
accounts.
Truth be told, there are hundreds of fake
Facebook pages selling cars online and most of them are fake and the
Nigerian Customs Service needs to be aware and proactive about it.
There are also thousands of fake Facebook
pages of celebrities asking their fans to fund their charity
organisations, fake Facebook pages of churches and pastors asking their
fans and followers to pay money or sow into their ministry to be able to
access instant miracles and blessings.
These accounts are actively fleecing gullible and unsuspecting individuals and business brands on a daily basis.
When Facebook realised that these fake
accounts and scams were eating at the heart of its credibility and
reputation it began to purge its platform of fake ‘likes’ and accounts.
In fact many brands have come to realise the reason why they are not
getting any engagement on their social media platforms is that many of
the ‘likes’ and ‘follows’ are fake.
In fact, I recently met a consultant who
admitted that a client told him to get him followers and just for the
numbers. It was however, an embarrassing sight ,when a newspaper
reported the drastic drop in the number of the brand’s followers
following one of Facebook’s cleanup process.
Fake Facebook ‘likes’ renders the social
media return on engagement and investment useless. While people may
celebrate increased numbers, an advert going to your 100,000 like may
actually be reaching 40,000 real individuals and 60,000 bots.
The quality and value in Facebook and
Twitter is not the number of fan and followers, it is the engagement
rate, people willing to read, respond and share your marketing message.
Some businesses are running click farms which sell likes and follows to
some marketers for a small sum of money. This helps them manufacture the
necessary results for people interested in magic number.
Anatomy of a fake Facebook account
While some are actually easy to spot,
many others are difficult to identify. Most times, personal profiles of
fake accounts have only one profile photo. They probably have never
updated their profile or their page recently.
Most times, they steal other people’s
pictures to use and this can easily be found out by doing an image
search on Google. Fake profiles of girls will have a contact number
which I think most ladies will naturally try to avoid. In fact, the most
common indicator is that they are reaching out to you after saying that
they ‘looked at your profile and they want a relationship with you’ and
‘distance does not matter’.
They haven’t updated their status in a
long time because they have to keep up with so many accounts. If you
look at their recent activities, they are likely to only be adding
friends (or proposed customers in this case). At times, you have a
friend request from someone who you thought was already your Facebook
friend.
That is probably a duplicate page and you need to confirm from the person independently to know which is the original.
Fake Facebook pages are much more
difficult to identify. Most times the official social media profile
pages can be found on the official websites. The fake ones, however, try
to mimic the original portal and they are always giving personal
addresses, websites, phone numbers and emails in a bid to direct you
away from the official channels. Never send money to any one you haven’t
seen and or pay for good you have not received.
Once they begin to ask for full payment
and commitment when they are offering nothing, it’s time to walk away.
Always do your independent checks apart from what they tell you.
Identify and report
While Facebook and Twitter themselves do
not have tools to identify and delete ‘likes’ and ‘follows’ in bulk,
several web applications such as Fakeoff application for Facebook and
others like StatusPeople, SocialBakers, SpamFighter and Untweep will
help identify if you have fake followers and fans.
While most people easily spot these
platforms, we should also help these online communities by reporting
them or call them out on social media in order to protect others.
The fact that most of them continue in
this means that some unsuspecting individual will land into their
carefully set traps. Based on the frequency of spam reports, Facebook
will look at the number of people reporting the page and will yank off
such pages.
How does this help brands?
I have heard a lot of complaints about
decreased engagements and this may be one of the pointers. By
eliminating fake fans and followers, brands and businesses will be able
to track the effectiveness of their advertising initiatives and to gain
better insight into how many people are being engaged. This eventually
influences outcomes as views, engagement rate and are a true reflection
of their marketing efforts.
Source:punchng.com
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