Full Article:Watch out for bogus World Cup websites that mimic official ticket and merchandise flows to steal money and personal data
As the FIFA World Cup 2026™ in the United States, Canada, and Mexico draws closer, anticipation is building toward fever pitch. Many soccer fans may still be hunting for tickets, merchandise, travel and hospitality packages – and scammers know exactly how to exploit this demand. In other words, many people are already in the state of mind that scammers count on: interested, impatient and, indeed, maybe a little worried that the tickets or other goods will sell out. Which is ultimately what makes these scams so effective.
ESET researchers in Latin America recently spotted a number of websites that are built for this very moment. Posing as the FIFA association or the official World Cup website, the imposter sites target people looking for tickets and merchandise, then steer them through fake registration and payment flows that steal their money and personal data. The series of steps is often actually the same as on the genuine World Cup website: register, add tickets for a game, jerseys or other merchandise to the cart, and pay.
Some victims may reach these websites through sponsored search results, while others click on ads on social media or links in email messages forwarded by someone who didn’t check the address properly. Whatever the scenario, here’s what you should know about fake FIFA- and World Cup-themed websites – and how to avoid scoring an ‘own goal.’
Foul play: Scams target soccer fans with fake World Cup tickets, merchandise
Watch out for bogus FIFA World Cup-themed websites that mimic official ticket and merchandise flows to steal money and personal data.
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