This email came to me through a church discussion board so I don't have any headers. It's a nice looking website that requests email account and password info to sign up for their "program". I search the net and it seem to be very famous on Facebook & Tweeter…
Hello ,
Your contact "\\*************\\" invited you to join our TestitandKeepit program.At this time we are actively searching for people who will be willing to test the new Apple iPad. The testing period will take only two months, after which you may keep it as compensation.
To see more details and register to our program, follow the link below:
http://www.testitandkeepit.com/1
Thanks,
The TestitandKeepit Team
How can you tell that a yet unreleased product is bound to become a hit? By checking out how it fares in online scam and phishing schemes, of course. Even though Apple’s iPad won’t ship untillater this month, cyber criminals waste no time and are already aiming hard-to-resist schemes at naive users who have had their eye on the iPad since the January introduction.
Facebook / Tweeter
The ruse is a simple one: The promise of becoming an iPad “beta-tester” and getting your hands on the device before everyone else does and free of charge, too. Such scams have been spreading on Facebook, Twitter and email lately, duping unsuspecting users with what looks like a legitimate offer to beta test Apple’s couch computing gizmo.
The problem isn’t that you’re supposed to become a fan of an offending Facebook page and enroll your friends, it’s a pop-up window that asks you to “register” as an iPad beta-tester by providing sensitive information like cellphone number. Don’t do it unless you want to be signed-up for a premium-rate cellphone service that will set you back around $10 a week. In addition, you’ll need to manually opt-out of it once you’ve figured out the extra charge.
Sometimes things can be too good to be true. For instance, you may be desperate to get your paws on the latest desirable gadget - the Apple iPad.
Scammers have created pages on Facebook claiming that you can be the lucky recipient of an Apple iPad if you simply register to be a beta-tester. Not only will they supply you with an iPad for free, but they'll also let you keep the iPad at the end of the beta-test. What could go wrong with that?
Hmm, well, as the following YouTube video explains, this is a scam which is using the lure of a free Apple iPad as bait for you to hand over your cellphone details:
The scam works like this:
The bad guys create a Facebook page, with a suitably alluring offer (in this case "iPad Researchers Wanted - Want to beta test Apple's latest product?"). This encourages you to "Become a fan" of the page (which, in itself, helps advertise it to your other friends on Facebook)
They then encourage you to invite all your friends to also become fans of the page, via a handy button. They say that this will increase your chances of being accepted for the bogus promotion. Of course, in reality, it increases the number of people who might be taken to the cleaners by the scammers.
Finally, Step 3 says you are ready to "Apply". However, although you are taken to a page which is designed to look like an official form on the Apple website, it is quickly overlaid by a pop-up survey.
In the example above I was asked to take a survey to prove I was a "human". After answering questions which supposedly would determine if I was more like 50 Cent than Kanye West, I was asked to fill in my contact information - including date of birth and mobile phone number - before I could continue to register for my free iPad.
And that's where the scam happens. The hackers who created this page are trying to sign you up for a premium rate cellphone service, that will charge you something like $10 a week until you unsubscribe.
You're probably not interested in which rap star you are more like, but you are interested in getting an Apple iPad, and so you might be tempted to enter your personal information.
Of course, this isn't an official beta-test at all, and Apple aren't going to send you an iPad for free. You will need to queue up like everyone else when they are released, and buy one like the rest of us (provided you have pockets big enough).
The good news is that after I alerted Facebook's security team about this page they disabled it very promptly. However, the bad news is that there are many other similar Facebook pages being created on the social network designed to scam unsuspecting users.
Not all of them pretend to offer an iPad, so be on your guard for other scams too. The most important thing to remember is to not invite your friends to any Facebook page or application until you have thoroughly researched what it's about. Furthermore, you should never be tempted to hand over your mobile phone number to some daft internet quiz.
Sadly, judging by the number of people who already said they were "fans" of the iPad offer, thousands have already fallen for the scam.
Oh, and in case you were wondering, scams like this aren't just run on Facebook. For instance, a quick search on Twitter found messages like this:
If you made the mistake of clicking on the link you would be taken to a webpage like the one shown below, claiming again to offer a free Apple iPad:
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