ScamSurvivors Blog
Posted on August 12, 2018 by wayne
Last time it was “stupid”, this time it’s “greedy”.
Early this morning, I was checking my social media feeds and spotted this comment from Avast! on Facebook:
https://www.facebook.com/avast/?hc_ref= ... yA&fref=nfAvast Software
19 hrs ·
All online scams have one thing in common: They want to tap your greed to get at personal information they can steal. These "phishing" ruses are happening 24/7.
A typical banking scam will ask for information so the scammer can access anything from your credit cards to your checking account. Never reply to these emails.
Here are 3 email scam examples ➤ https://bit.ly/2KCnfM1 via Forbes
Earlier that day I’d pickeds up a copy of a newspaper that had an article on sextortion we’d worked with them on. The last quote from me in that wa “Don’t let shame kill you”. Now I’m seeing this company publicly call victims of “all online scams” greedy. They also posted it on their Twitter feed, but this time the wording was slightly different:
https://twitter.com/avast_antivirus?ref ... r%5EauthorAvast Software
Verified account
@avast_antivirus
20h20 hours ago
More
Online scams have one thing in common: They want to tap your greed to get at personal information they can steal.
A typical banking scam will ask for information so the scammer can access anything from your credit cards to your checking account ➤ https://bit.ly/2KCnfM1 @Forbes
Not “All online scams” this time, but rather “Online scams”. This shows someone took the time to edit the wording before posting it. Due to this, we’ve made the decision to no longer recommend Avast!” antivirus on our site and have removed the links to their download page from both our steps and the “read this first” thread. We’ve also removed their software from our own computers and switched to a different company. It’s a constant struggle fighting the “victims are stupid and greedy” myth, and posts like this only make it harder. Now we’re not denying that some people get caught up in scams due to their own greed, but many become sucked in due to naivety, desperation, even the desire to do good. Are charity scam victims greedy? Are “work from home” scam victims greedy? Are romance scam victims greedy? What about the victims of hitman scams? Grandparent scams? Phishing? “Tech support” scams? I could go on. Dismissing all scam victims as greedy is not only lazy reporting, but puts victims at risk. We at ScamSurvivors refuse to support anyone who makes such sweeping, harmful statements. We should all be better than that.
turn around and call their customers "greedy?"global #cybersecurity leader for businesses and consumers, protecting hundreds of millions of people under the Avast and AVG brands
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