A Walmart ‘robocall scam’ sweeping the nation, warns FCC. How fake employees will try to get you to give up your info

A Walmart ‘robocall scam’ sweeping the nation, warns FCC. How fake employees will try to get you to give up your info


Consumers across the country need to be careful of who’s calling.

A nationwide robocall scam involving fake Walmart employees is pressuring Americans to share sensitive information, according to federal regulators and telecom security experts.

The automated calls, explains a press release (1) from the Federal Communications Commission (FCC), claim that a Walmart account has been charged for a purchase the victim didn’t authorize. Victims are then urged to quickly act to “cancel” the order by pressing a number to speak with a live representative.

This is where things get dangerous.

The FCC says the calls have already reached hundreds of thousands of Americans and could target tens of millions more. Here’s what you need to know.

Scammers are taking advantage of a powerful fear for everyday consumers: unauthorized charges.

“It’s too easy to get tricked when you feel pressure to act right away to address a problem that might cost you money,” YouMail CEO Alex Quilici told CBS News in an email (2). YouMail makes technology to block robocalls and scam texts and has been working with the FCC to track calls associated with the phishing campaign.

Here’s an example of a script the scammers follow, according to Quilici:

“Hi, this is [NAME] from Walmart, and this is not a telemarketing call. We have detected a pre-authorized purchase of $919.45 for a PlayStation 5 and 3D headset, recently placed through a Walmart account registered to your name and phone number. If you did not authorize this purchase, press 1 to speak with a Walmart representative immediately.”

To sound legitimate, the scammers rotate through fake employee names and use artificial intelligence to sound like real automated retail calls.

Once the consumer is hooked in by the fake call, they get transferred to fraudsters posing as customer service agents who then ask for personal information, including credit card Social Security numbers.

Cybersecurity expert Iskander Sanchez-Rola, director of AI and innovation for Norton, told CBS that Walmart is a target because it’s one of the most trusted retailers in the country, with millions of shoppers — and that’s not the only reason.


finance.yahoo.com
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