Facebook scammers are awlays try to to pique your curiosity by using strong terms. This time they trying to pique your curiosity by using strong terms like “committing suicide” (though they misspell it) and “this video.” Just like with previous scams, they are leveraging Facebook with sensational headlines to target ignorant victims. Protalinski has report on this Scam by Emil to tech industry. Lets checkout his findings bellow.
This version says something along the lines of “Photographer commited SUICIDE 3 days after shooting THIS video!” followed by a link and then a description of “This really must have been an awkward moment.” According to Sophos, the link unsurprisingly wants you to spread the content (it tells you to “Jaa” it, which means “Share” in Finnish) to your Facebook friends and family.
The scammers’ goal is to drive more traffic towards their online surveys by innocently asking you to verify your age. Some may believe they will see a morbid video at the end, but they won’t. This is how the scammer earns his or her money: a commission for every survey completed.
As we have recommended before, if you see a scam like this one, report it. Then go check your own wall to make sure you’re not spreading the scam; the sooner you clean it up and unlike the page, the better. You can even contact Facebook Security if you’d like to.
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