Holly Willoughby Martin Lewis Gordon Ramsay Pop reports Digital Holly Willoughby Martin Lewis Gordon Ramsay

Crooks are using pics of celebs for fake adverts - and 'making nearly £1m a day'

Reading now: 556
www.dailystar.co.uk

Holly Willoughby, Martin Lewis and even the Duchess of Cambridge have been used for scams.A report has revealed that flawed regulation is allowing crime gangs to pocket more than £800,000 per day.READ MORE: Grandad loses £24,000 after sending money to fake 'son' in heartless WhatsApp scamThe bogus adverts pop up online in places like the bottom of news websites and blogs.They often boast false claims as clickbait to entice punters to buy a product - that then never arrives.Consumer watchdog Which?

said that only 1% of digital advertising is safe from this type of fraud, known as ‘malvertising’.One con showed the Duchess of Cambridge with a black eye under the headline: “Kate finally reveals what caused the dispute.”Readers who clicked on the image were taken to a fake website for face cream which took their money but did not deliver.Other swindles include Martin Lewis purporting to encourage people to invest in cryptocurrency and top chef Gordon Ramsay revealing his “number one cash maker”.The report said a gang that was responsible for a “large scale malvertising campaign” using fake celebrity endorsed bitcoin scam adverts on popular news websites used “fake ad creative, website targeting, a variety of cloaking techniques, and use of reputable ad servers” to bank $1 million (£810,000) in one day.Which?

commissioned Beruku, a digital research group, to carry out the research and said the results show the scale of the problem means self-regulation is not working.They said most of the fraud is being carried out by organised criminal groups that create new identities and fake media agencies.The sophisticated racket means that they constantly pop up again under new guises when adverts do get caught.Criminals make money in a.

Read more on dailystar.co.uk
The website celebsbar.com is an aggregator of news from open sources. The source is indicated at the beginning and at the end of the announcement. You can send a complaint on the news if you find it unreliable.

Related News

DMCA