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E-Commerce and Cyber Scams
Since the advent of the internet, there has been an exponential surge in e-commerce crimes and cyber scams. The virtual landscape offers anonymity and insulates syndicate groups from apprehension, allowing them to operate with ease. With the burgeoning of online applications and social media, we find ourselves constantly engaging with cyber interfaces to complete transactions and exchange information. This paradigmatic shift in day-to-day affairs is commensurate to the accelerated rates of cyber crimes and fraudulent scams. The global pandemic has enlivened this playing field for scammers.
The Straits Times reported a record 1.3 million dollars in scam-related losses based on claims and reports filed in the early months of 2020. The global pandemic backdrop and the distress induced chaos proved an ideal scavenging ground for scammers. Utilising open Internet marketplaces, the scammers created fake accounts with stocks of critical resources such as masks and face shields only to disappear without a trace after payment was fulfilled.
Yet another common type of scam involved the creation of imitation proxy accounts to engage individuals and request for personal information such as banking details, NRIC details, address in order to siphon funds, collect information and extort. Social media platforms are the predominant resource of information, from photographs to contact information, for scammers to acquire and manipulate in order to extract funds and gain access to private assets. The increase of such incidents during the pandemic is again unsurprising, with a recession afoot and inequity at a new high.
Last, but certainly not least, credit scams were also observed to have risen, with customised mass messages inviting individuals to take-up bank loans with local banks. Without knowledge of how banks operate, individuals in crisis situations tend to look to adverts, such as these, as lifelines to tide them through such volatile times. Victims, however, are left entangled with unlicensed money-lenders or ensnared into signing guarantees for loans from unlicensed lenders. This is not including impersonators, who target vulnerable members of our community and prey on their lack of awareness.
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