Quote:
Originally Posted by Blueblaze
I posted some tools to sell on Facebook Marketplace and some guy named "Bossa" offered to pay me for a table saw with Zelle and said his son with the truck would come by and pick it up. The "Zelle" notification went straight to my spam folder. It looked real, but said the transaction was on hold because my bank account wasn't a business account and that the sender would need to raise the amount to $300 so they could convert it to a business account so the transaction would go through. Have you ever heard anything so absurd?
So I asked him what the hell was going on and he said he got the same message, but he would trust me to send me the $300 and then I could just bounce it back to him.
How dumb do these idiots think people are? Does that ever work? I literally copied the text of the fake Zelle message into Google search and it immediately produced a warning of that exact scam. So I clicked the guy's profile and it said he was in Orlando, but the spelling was "Bre Bossa". So I searched for "Bossa" and found a guy in India with a similar empty profile and no real name. And, of course, there was no way to report either fake profile as a known scammer -- all I could do was flag them both as possible fakes.
I don't know why Facebook refuses to clean up their mess. How would you even go about creating a fake profile? I remember being forced to prove my identify when I first started using it years ago. Apparently, that rule only applies to non-criminals.
I think the only way to get through to Zuckerberg is to quit using Facebook until they quit allowing these stupid scams and fake profiles. I deleted my profile. I'm done with it.
|
Yes, it’s a scam. But if you post things for sale here or on V-N, you will find the same scam being played, or a related scam. What matters is getting your thing sold, for cash. If you are selling a golf cart, where people might not have that amount in cash, only sell to villagers, and check them out, and go with them to the bank or something. I’m not sure, but I think the “I’m sending my son to pick it up” thing is because these are companies that have workers who spend all day buying things on line at good prices, or the best price they can get, then send less intelligent people to pick them up for less money. They usually want to pay with a cashier’s check or a money order, and neither is safe anymore. PayPal is safe because it automatically takes the money from the buyer’s bank account or credit card and is on the hook if the money isn’t there.
A worse scam is the one where the buyer says he will pay you more than your asking price if you accept and cash a cashier’s check or. Money order. Beware.