BBB: Scammers Using Phishing to Steal Facebook Members’ Info

Scammers are now targeting Facebook members telling them they have violated the social media’s community standards.

According to the Better Business Bureau, it’s the latest phishing scheme designed to scare Facebook users into sharing their login credentials.

Here’s how you can spot the scam and protect your account from hackers.

First, you receive an email that appears to come from Facebook and says something like, “Recently, we discovered a breach of our Facebook Community Standards on your page. Your page has been disabled for violating Facebook Terms. If you believe the decision is incorrect, you can request a review and file an appeal at the link below.”

The message may also state that if you don’t act in the next 24 hours, Facebook will delete your account permanently.

The email includes a link that appears to lead to Facebook.com.

Because you want to keep your account, you may think about clicking – however, the BBB warns you must stay calm and take a closer look. On closer inspection, you’ll likely find signs of a scam.

These include typos, email sender addresses that aren’t related to Facebook, and, if you hover over the link in the email (without clicking on it), you will discover that it doesn’t point to Facebook’s website.

If you click the link, you’ll likely be taken to an official-looking page and prompted to complete a form to appeal the policy violation. You’ll be asked for your login email, phone number, name, and other details. The page will ask you to confirm your password when you hit submit. If you do, scammers will have all the information they need to hack your account.

The BBB advises that to avoid Facebook phishing scams, always read suspicious emails carefully, looking for signs of a scam, before you act. Remember that scammers love to target social media accounts, so fake alerts aren’t uncommon.

Verify the claims. Log into your Facebook account directly to verify there is a problem before deciding how to proceed.

Always log into your account directly. Even if you think an alert is authentic, use your social media app to log in or enter the URL in the browser bar by typing it, not by clicking on a link sent to you.

You can read more about how phishing scams work by going to BBB.org.

And if you spot a social media scam, report it to BBB.org/ScamTracker.