Tech and Customer Support Fraud involves a criminal posing as technical or customer support/service to defraud unwitting individuals. Criminals may offer support to resolve such issues as a compromised email or bank account, a virus on a computer, or a software license renewal. Recent complaints involve criminals posing as customer support for financial institutions, utility companies, or cryptocurrency exchanges.
Many victims report being directed to make wire transfers to overseas accounts or purchase large amounts of prepaid cards. The use of cryptocurrency and cryptocurrency ATMs is also an emerging method of payment.
Tech support scammers continue to impersonate well-known tech companies, offering to fix non-existent technology issues, renewing fraudulent software, or security subscriptions. In 2021, the IC3 observed an increase in complaints reporting the impersonation of customer support, which has taken on a variety of forms.
- Banking support impersonators: Victims are usually contacted telephonically or via text to indicate a problem with the customer's account and the victim is persuaded to allow access to their computer and bank account to correct the issue. The scammer utilizes the access to initiate transfers from the account and others associated with it. By the time the victim realizes what occurred, the account is often empty.
- Cryptocurrency support impersonators:Cryptocurrency is still a new currency unfamiliar to most. Increasingly, crypto-owners are falling victim to scammers impersonating support or security from cryptocurrency exchanges.
- Owners are cold-contacted via call, text, or email alerting them to a security problem with their crypto wallet and are convinced to either grant access to their crypto wallet or transfer the contents of their wallet to another wallet to "safeguard" the contents.
- Crypto-owners are also searching online for support with their crypto wallets and transactions. Fraudsters will create fictitious support sites to entice crypto-owners to contact them directly and convince them to divulge login information or control of their crypto accounts.
- Drivers employed by ride-share or transportation mobility companies: Drivers report being contacted by someone impersonating support staff of their rideshare company with an issue regarding a rider complaint or the driver's account. The driver is convinced to allow access to their account and all funds in the account are taken by the impersonator.
- Utility, cable, or internet companies: Victims report being contacted by someone impersonating a utility company with claims of an unpaid bill they must pay immediately to avoid shutoff; or contacted by a cable, phone, or internet company with offers of great savings.
- Travel industry: Scammers are impersonating customer support of the car rental, airline, and hotel industries with offers of great deals or taking fake reservations. Payment is usually requested by prepaid cards. Unsuspecting victims report to a reservation counter, only to find no car, hotel, or flight reservation exists.