Warning: beware of Facebook IPO scams

By | February 1, 2012, 10:40am PST

Summary: Facebook scams are about to get a lot more serious now that the company is about to announce its plans to go public this year. Be wary of anything on the social network discussing Facebook stock.

As Facebook prepares to go public this week, most likely today, according to multiple sources, you should probably take note that this won’t affect you, the average Facebook user, for quite some time. In the short term though, the biggest way it will affect you is the inundation of spam and scams that will most likely hit the social network.

Be warned: the Facebook IPO is a big enough event in the technology world that scammers will just have to take advantage. There is so much hype surrounding the Facebook IPO it’s inevitable that malicious groups and individuals will want to cash in. Furthermore, Facebook users seem to eat up scams about Facebook itself more than anything else.

The last time I saw this big of an event abused, was the death of the Apple CEO Steve Jobs. There were various Steve Jobs scams on Facebook, and they easily overshadowed the actual news about Jobs and Facebook.

I expect the same thing to happen again, but worse. There are going to be the usual scams that just want you to click on links and show you advertisements instead of whatever Facebook IPO news you think you’re going to see, but there’s also going to be a lot of fraud. I believe that many are going to try to sell bogus Facebook pre-IPO stock, or claim to have free Facebook stock to give away. What better place to push such nonsense than on Facebook itself?

I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again: don’t click on everything your Facebook friends share on the social network. In general, don’t believe everything you read on the Internet, especially if it wants you to click on it. Last but not least, don’t buy into the hype!

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Emil Protalinski has covered the tech industry for five years for multiple publications.

Disclosure

Emil Protalinski

Emil has nothing to disclose.

Biography

Emil Protalinski

Emil Protalinski has covered the tech industry for five years for multiple publications, including Neowin for two years and Ars Technica for three years. He has written 1,000s of articles for both, with a particular focus on scrutinizing Microsoft products and services. Recently, Emil has expanded his coverage to non-Microsoft technologies, including the social networking giant Facebook.

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Is it really illegal?
RelaxWalk 1st Feb
If people are too naive / greedy / gullible to click on those scam links, that just proves the scammer's genius. This deserves a few clicks.

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