With the holiday season now in sight, businesses and consumers alike have begun to prepare for the annual shopping and gift giving frenzy. Prices are seeing a much-needed plunge, but this is also the time of year where cybersecurity hygiene tends to drop, too.
As inboxes flood with messages about markdowns galore, opportunistic cyber criminals use this time to step up their holiday scams. This post covers why seasonal retail is under attack by cyber criminals, five common holiday season scams, and what businesses and shoppers can do to keep up their cyber defenses.
From late November through to the end of the year, consumers across the globe rack up billions of dollars shopping holiday deals and giving generously to charities. When the COVID-19 pandemic first made its impact across the world in early 2020, online shopping surged, and now more people than ever make purchases virtually.
Deloitte’s 2022 Holiday Retail Survey found that the online shopping trends seen during the height of the pandemic have endured. This year, the survey reported that online shopping took a 63% share; numbers that are on par with the previous two years.
Shoppers this year also note they are not “giving up the convenience of online shopping” even as they warm up to in-store visits, and 66% of retail executives expect online holiday shopping traffic to have at least single-digit growth over last year.
Those kinds of figures are naturally attractive to cyber threat actors, who hope that the dash to grab the best discounts on items with limited availability will lead buyers to fall for fraudulent activity.
Scammers take advantage of unsuspecting shoppers in multiple ways, including through the use of fake websites, discount campaigns, and even charities with the goal of obtaining personal and financial information.
Here’s five ways threat actors take advantage of the holiday season and how consumers and businesses can stay protected.
This is the time of year when scammers zero in on targets who are searching for the best markdowns and bundle promotions, trying to spread their dollars further. Scammers run fake ads showing valuable and hard-to-get items at incredible prices. To encourage shoppers to click, they often use urgent phrasing, promising attractive discounts only while supplies last, or for a limited time only.
To further increase clickability, scammers use the same marketing strategies as legitimate ads to trick shoppers who are already moving faster than usual and may have their guard down. Once an unsuspecting victim clicks the link, they are led to fraudulent sale sites with credit card skimmers embedded in the code.
How To Stay Safe:
Scammers will go to great lengths to obtain sensitive information. Other than hosting fake ads with bad links, they also build fraudulent applications that claim to search for and consolidate discount codes and coupons from popular brand names.
These fake apps are usually distributed through unofficial app repositories with the intention of having users download malware onto their devices, stealing payment information, or credentials to social media or online banking accounts.
How To Stay Safe:
Sometimes all it takes is an unassuming email and a clever subject line to sink the hook. The holiday season is rife with phishing scams as cyber threats actors take to hiding amongst the throngs of legitimate emails from big brands.
Some scammers create spoofs of legitimate holiday emails from established brands and lure in their target with bargain prices. Clicking the links leads shoppers to malicious websites primed to drop malware or phish for login credentials.
Other than offering special gifts, bundle pricing, and extra coupons, holiday email scams may also send shoppers invoices for items they did not purchase. These kinds of emails include deceptive links to “report a problem” or reach a customer service team member. The scammers hope that indignant shoppers will fall for the links and click, thinking they can dispute the invoice.
How To Stay Safe:
The winter holidays is often a time of paying back one’s gratitude through charity and threat actors are waiting on the side lines to exploit the season’s givings. Scammers will often take full advantage of people’s generosity during this time of year by spoofing the phone numbers of legitimate charities and impersonating the agents to ask for donations.
Some cyber scammers may send text messages, target people through social media, or set up a computerized auto dialer to deliver pre-recorded messages.
How To Stay Safe:
Businesses often hire in advance of the busy holiday season. Consumers who have trusted known brands for years may find themselves applying for a little part-time, seasonal work only to find that they’ve given away personal information to a fraudster.
Scammers in these schemes impersonate HR representatives, recruiters, and even senior managers of real companies and post help-wanted ads via email or on social media platforms.
Usually, these open roles will include forms for the hopeful applicant to fill out and ask for intimate details such as address, tax details, social security number, work permit information, and other personally identifiable information (PII).
If the ad is not directly phishing for PII, then applicants may be led to bogus sites that scan for email addresses and passwords or even ask them to pay upfront for job supplies and training fees.
How To Stay Safe:
We’ve covered many common scams that day to day consumers face during the holiday rush, but it’s important for businesses to protect themselves and their customers from cyber threats, too. During the holiday season when threat actors are more active, businesses may equally find that they are understaffed and dealing with heavy demand.
During the holiday season, businesses should be prepared to see increases in malware campaigns, ransomware and data extortion, Distributed-Denial-of-Service (DDoS) attacks, and the possibility of data loss.
As the number of digital transactions soars during the holiday season, establishing better cybersecurity processes can help to keep businesses and their customers safe from holiday scams.
Sometimes, the holidays bring out the worst in people, and opportunistic scammers and attackers reserve a top spot on the naughty list. By exploiting the habits of a new wave of online consumers, cyber attackers have made it a seasonal push to target the annual increases in digital sales and donations.
While shoppers search for the best deals out there, it is important to keep up regular cyber hygiene and be wary of things that seem a little too good to be true. Practicing good online habits such as keeping personal identifiable information and payment data private and double-checking site, link, and app validity can save shoppers from much grief during what should be a joyful season.
Businesses ramping up for the annual year-end sales can also stay safe and make sure they and their customers are protected from payment data and identity theft. For expert advice on how to get 24/7 protection for your business and assets, contact us or request a demo. We hope the tips offered in this post help everyone stay safe during the festivities!