A new dating scam pretends to help users review their matches for free on eHarmony.com in a fraudulent campaign that piggybacks on the eHarmony name and reputation – a web dating portal with members in 150 countries and a tradition of almost 14 years.
Unsolicited e-mails promise perfect dates only if they join the eHarmony community by following a link in the message body. But, as users hit the Find My Matches button, they undergo a series of suspicious and unjustified redirects and reach a landing page instead of the official eharmony.com website.
The landing page comprises a list of links to regional dating and chat websites – some of which seem similar to the Russian bride scheme, in which women from Russia want to get married but don’t have money to travel to the countries the men are living in. As soon as the men send the money, the relationship ends and the women disappear.
The dating webpages advertise matches from various areas including Spain, Brazil, Asia or East Europe.
Of course, these e-mails will under no circumstance get users eHarmony memberships or perfect matches. Because they are fake messages that hijack singletons and take them to shady dating websites or shopping portals.
These scam e-mails include mistakes or inconsistencies that should alert recipients to their suspicious origin:
Users need to pay attention to such hints and delete any unsolicited e-mails that land in their inbox. If they want to join a dating community, they need to look for the official dating portal and subscribe manually at the website. They should also look for recommendations from people who have personally used these services.
A good antivirus solution will block malicious webpages and warn users they are about to enter a suspicious website.
All product and company names mentioned herein are for identification purposes only and are the property of, and may be trademarks of, their respective owners.
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A blend of product manager and journalist with a pinch of e-threat analysis, Loredana writes mostly about malware and spam. She believes that most errors happen between the keyboard and the chair.
View all postsNovember 14, 2024
September 06, 2024