A new breed of social media ‘influencers’ are encouraging their thousands of followers to commit scams.
They openly brag about their luxury lifestyle funded by illegal means in an attempt to become what they jokingly describe as the ‘Kim Kardashian of fraud’.
And unlike most influencers that legitimately promote fashion and beauty products, the con artists lure recruits with slick adverts promising earnings of up to £4,000 on sites such as Instagram, YouTube and TikTok.
Some have more than 150,000 followers and describe themselves as ‘fraud consultants’.
They offer guides explaining how to scam banks, major retailers and even the Government’s Universal Credit system for between £30 and £100, a BBC Panorama investigation revealed.
A new breed of social media ‘influencers’ offer guides explaining how to scam banks, major retailers and even the Government’s Universal Credit system for between £30 and £100
Private details are stolen using phishing scams and then sold on the social media sites. This involves sending fraudulent texts or emails that appear to come from a legitimate source to dupe victims into handing over their personal information.
Once users have these details, they can buy and follow the influencers’ guides that explain how to make online purchases or take out a loan in someone else’s name. Online fraud – which the influencers refer to as ‘clicking’ – has soared during the pandemic and reached an estimated £262million last year.
But experts warned it is often ‘nearly impossible’ to catch those responsible because they leave ‘no digital footprint behind them’.
The Panorama investigation found one con artist using the alias ‘Uncle Vio’ on Snapchat offering to build a fake website and send 4,000 phishing texts for £115. Another influencer known as Tankz – who has more than 150,000 followers across their social media sites – sent an undercover reporter a guide for £100.
A link was sent via social media that provided access to 43 files on an online storage system with detailed instructions on how to exploit online retailers.
On Tankz’s YouTube account, a video in which he rapped ‘I’m a London scammer – I see it, I want it, I click it’ had gained over six million views.
Cybersecurity expert Tim Ayling told the programme, which aired on BBC1 last night, the influencer wanted to be the ‘Kim Kardashian of fraud’ – meaning they flaunt their wealth online like the reality star but unlike her, fund their lifestyle through scams.
Panorama said it believed it had identified Tankz as a London university undergraduate who was living in student accommodation in Wembley, north-west London.
Cybercrime specialist Jake Moore claimed it’s difficult to find the culprits.
He said: ‘Anonymous accounts are leaving not just a small amount of breadcrumbs to investigate – there are no breadcrumbs. There’s no digital footprint left behind them. So to investigate this is nearly impossible.’
The ‘influencers’ brag about their lifestyle funded by illegal means in an attempt to become what they jokingly describe as the ‘Kim Kardashian of fraud’ (pictured – Kim Kardashian)
TikTok, Twitter, Facebook, Snapchat, Instagram and YouTube all said they do not allow fraud on their platforms and were constantly shutting down criminal content.