The Better Business Bureau of Southern Piedmont and Western North Carolina offers the following tips about scams.
A “Secret Santa” around the office, or with friends and family can be fun. A gift
exchange among online friends you haven’t met, well, that’s a little different and carries a heftier consequence. These gift exchanges, while they look like innocent fun, are really pyramid schemes – and are considered illegal.
The “Secret Sister” gift exchange campaign quickly became popular several years ago through Facebook posts promising participants would receive up to 36 gifts, in exchange for sending one gift. Each holiday season, the scheme pops back up. A
newer version of this scam revolves around exchanging bottles of wine; another
suggests purchasing $10 gifts online. You might see references to receiving “happy
mail” or doing the exchange “for the good of the sisterhood.” Other 2020 versions
include this text: “If there’s EVER been a year we need random fun presents to come in the mail IT’S 2020!!!!!!” or “And Grinches who say this is a scam… It’s 2020.”
How the Scam Works:
The scheme starts with a convincing invitation, either by email or social media to sign up for what seems like a great, fun program. All you must do is provide your name and address and personal information of a few additional friends, and tack this information on to a list that’s already started of people you’ve never met on the internet. Next, it’s your turn to send an email or social media invitation to send a modest gift or bottle of wine to a stranger along with their friends, family and contacts.
A newer twist on the idea asks you to give your e-Transfer email and asks users to pick a name off of a list and send money to strangers, to “pay it forward.”
The cycle continues and you’re left with buying and shipping gifts or money to unknown individuals, in hopes that the favor is reciprocated by receiving the promised number of gifts in return. Unfortunately, it doesn’t happen. Just like any other pyramid scheme, it relies on the recruitment of individuals to keep the scam afloat. Once people stop participating in the gift exchange, the gift supply stops as well, and leaves hundreds of disappointed people without their promised gifts or cash.
It should be noted that pyramid schemes are illegal in the US and Canada. The U.S. Postal Inspection Services explains that these gift exchanges are considered a form of gambling and that participants could be subject to penalties such as jail time, fines or a lawsuit for mail fraud.
There is another layer of danger to participating in these schemes. When signing up, the alleged campaign organizer is asking for personal information such as a mailing address or an email. With just a few pieces of information, cyber thieves could expose you to future scams or commit identity theft.
The next time someone promises a bounty of gifts or cash by mail, email, or social
media, BBB recommends the following:
● Ignore it! Keep in mind that pyramid schemes are international. Chain letters
involving money or valuable items that promise big returns are illegal. Stop and ask, is it worth breaking the law? Report it instead to Canadian agencies or to the
U.S. Postal Inspection Services.
● Report social media posts. If you receive an invitation to join a pyramid scheme
on social media, report it. You can report these Facebook posts by clicking in the
upper righthand corner and selecting “Report post” or “report photo.”
● Never give your personal information to strangers. This will open you up to
identity theft and other scams.
● Be wary of false claims. Some pyramid schemes try to win your confidence by
claiming they’re legal and endorsed by the government. These imposter
schemes are false as the government will never endorse illegal activity. No
matter what they claim, pyramid schemes will not make you rich. You will receive
little to no money back on your “investment” or gift exchange.
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December 07, 2020 at 01:40AM
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