An online credit card scam that stole millions, with just pennies at a time, was halted by the U.S. Federal Trade Commission. The online credit card scam used fake companies and identity theft to steal small amounts of money that went undetected by consumers or fraud detectors. Over four years, more than a million people were charged anywhere from 25 cents to $ 9 on their credit cards in an online scam that added up to a lot more than $ 10 million.
Victims of the scam didn’t even notice
The elaborate online credit card scam operated undetected because scammers made very small charges and set up more than 100 bogus companies to process the transactions. It was reported by PC World that U.S. credit card holders financed the majority of the scam because about 94 percent of all charges went uncontested by the victims of identity theft. FTC reports the scammers charged 1.35 million credit cards a total of $ 9.5 million, but only 78,724 of these fake charges were ever noticed. They would generally make just one charge per card number to fake business names such as Adele Services or Bartelca LLC. Avivah Litan, who’s an analyst with the Gartner research firm who follows bank fraud, told PC World:
“They know that the majority of the fraud detection systems won’t detect anything under $ 10 and they know that consumers won’t complain about a 20 cent fee. What’s different here is the scale, and that they got away with it for so numerous years.”
A trend with credit card fraud
The online scam is a textbook case about how online services could be used to facilitate business within the 21st century can also be exploited for credit card fraud. As credit cards are increasingly getting used for inexpensive purchases–they’re now accepted by soda machines and parking meters–credit card fraud criminals have cashed in on the trend. It was reported by IDG News Service that the scammers found loopholes in the credit card processing system that allowed them to set up fake U.S. companies that then ran a lot more than 1 million fake credit card transactions through legitimate credit card processing companies. One of the largest payment processors in the U.S., First Data, was a favorite of the scammers. First Data had 110 of the 116 face merchant accounts. They also set up bogus accounts with Elavon.
Source of identity theft uncertain
The FTC believes the defendants could have run credit checks on the identity theft victims to be sure that they were creditworthy. The FTC doesn’t know where the scammers obtained the credit card numbers they charged, however they might are purchased from any online carder forums, which are black market Web sites where criminals purchase and sell stolen information.
Credit card scam that is online seems like a textbook case
To create the virtual infrastructure for the online credit card scam, Webpronews teaches us the scammers set up some fake physical addresses and fake web online websites pretending to sell products, along with a real company’s tax number found online. Scammers then sent out quite a couple of spam e-mail pretending to recruit American finance managers for offshore financial service companies. Those selected by the scammers were told that they needed to set up dummy corporations to receive the credit card payments and send the money to bank accounts in Lithuania, Estonia, Latvia, Bulgaria, Cyprus and Kyrgyzstan.
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PC World
pcworld.com/businesscenter/article/199952/ftc_says_scammers_stole_millions_using_virtual_companies.html
IDG News service
computerworld.com/s/article/9178560/FTC_says_scammers_stole_millions_using_virtual_companies?taxonomyId=17
Webpronews
webpronews.com/topnews/2010/06/28/ftc-cracks-down-on-online-payment-scam