By Brian Krebs
Virtually every aspect of cybercrime has been made into a service or
plug-and-play product. That includes dating scams — among the oldest and
most common of online swindles. Recently, I had a chance to review a
package of dating scam emails, instructions, pictures, videos and love
letter templates that are sold to scammers in the underground, and was
struck by how commoditized this type of fraud has become.
The dating scam package is assembled for and marketed to
Russian-speaking hackers, with hundreds of email templates written in
English and a variety of European languages. Many of the sample emails
read a bit like Mad Libs or choose-your-own-adventure texts, featuring decision templates that include advice for ultimately tricking the mark into wiring money to the scammer.
The romance scam package is designed for fraudsters who prey on
lonely men via dating Web sites and small spam campaigns. The vendor of
the fraud package advertises a guaranteed response rate of at least 1.2
percent, and states that customers who average 30 scam letters per day
can expect to earn roughly $2,000 a week. The proprietor also claims
that his method is more than 20% effective within three replies and over
60% effective after eight.
The dating scam package advises customers to stick to a
tried-and-true approach. For instance, scammers are urged to include an
email from the mother of the girl in the first 10 emails between the
scammer and a target. The scammer often pretends to be a young woman in
an isolated or desolate region of Russia who is desperate for a new
life, and the email from the girl’s supposed mother is intended to add
legitimacy to the scheme.
Then there are dozens of pre-fabricated excuses for not talking on
the phone, an activity reserved for the final stretch of the scam when
the fraudster typically pretends to be stranded at the airport or
somewhere else en route to the target’s home town.
“Working with dozens of possible outcomes, they carefully lay out
every possible response, including dealing with broke guys who fell in
love online,” said Alex Holden, the security expert who
intercepted the romance scam package. “If the mark doesn’t have money,
the package contains advice for getting him credit, telling the customer
to restate his love and discuss credit options.”
Interestingly, although Russia is considered by many to be among the
most hostile countries toward homosexuals, the makers of this dating
scam package also include advice and templates for targeting gay men.
Also included in the dating scam tutorial is a list of email
addresses and pseudonyms favored by anti-scammer vigilantes who try to
waste the scammers’ time and otherwise prevent them from conning real
victims. In addition, the package bundles several photos and videos of
attractive Russian women, some of whom are holding up blank signs onto
which the scammer can later Photoshop whatever message he wants.
Holden said that an enterprising fraudster with the right programming
skills or the funds to hire a coder could easily automate the scam
using bots that are programmed to respond to emails from the targets
with content-specific replies.
CALL CENTERS TO CLOSE THE DEAL
The romance scam package urges customers to send at least a dozen
emails to establish a rapport and relationship before even
mentioning the subject of traveling to meet the target. It is in this
critical, final part of the scam that the fraudster is encouraged to
take advantage of criminal call centers that staff women who can be
hired to play the part of the damsel in distress.
“When you get down to the final stage, there has to be a crisis, some
compelling reason why the target should you send the money,” said
Holden, founder of Hold Security
[full disclosure: Yours Truly is an uncompensated adviser to Holden’s
company]. “Usually this is something like the girl is stranded at the
airport or needs money to get a travel visa. There has to be some kind
of distress situation for this person to be duped into wiring money,
which can be anywhere between $200 and $2,000 on average.”
Crooked call centers like the one pictured in the screen shot above
employ male and female con artists who speak a variety of languages.
When the call center employees are not being hired to close the deal on a
romance scam, very often they are used to assist in bank account
takeovers, redirecting packages with shipping companies, or handling
fraudulent new credit applications that require phone verification.
Another reason that call centers aren’t used earlier in romance
scams: Hiring one is expensive. The call center pictured above charges
$10 per call, payable only in Bitcoin.
“If you imagine the cost of doing by phone every part of the scam,
it’s rather high, so they do most of the scam via email,” Holden said.
“What we tend to see with these dating scams is the scammer will tell
the call center operator to be sure to mention special nicknames and to
remind him of specific things they talked about in their email
correspondence.”
Check back later this week for a more in-depth story about criminal call centers.
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