NEW: FB Marketplace has 1 billion users and is one of the company’s most promising sources of $$. But growth comes at a cost: our investigation reveals how FB fails to protect buyers and sellers from scam listings, fake accounts & violent crime. Thread... propublica.org/article/facebo…
Internal documents, interviews with Marketplace workers, and law enforcement records show how the product has become a favorite of cybercriminals who come from around the world to find victims. There’s a staggering array of scams being perpetrated on Marketplace:
Facebook says Marketplace “lets you see what real people in your own community are selling,” and that viewing a profile is a great way to see who you’re dealing with. But workers say hacked and fake accounts are a huge issue, and are used by fraudsters to rip off people at scale
Scams and crime are always a reality on peer-to-peer sales sites. But FB’s scale, existing safety issues, and approach to securing its platform create a unique opportunity for bad actors. The company says it heavily invests in systems and people to protect Marketplace.
Marketplace's flaws reflect Facebook's approach to overseeing its platform. It rapidly scales new products to a user base of ~3 billion, and then relies on automated systems, low-paid contractors and a smaller number of full-time FB employees to enforce its rules.
We found a network of fake & suspicious accounts posting thousands of Spanish-language listings for penis enlargement/ED. These obviously bogus profiles flooded Marketplace with listings featuring hypersexalized images for oral supplements that violated multiple FB policies.
After clicking on a few of the posts, they began appearing in my Marketpalce recommendations. Facebook eventually removed thousands of the listings and took other action against more than 100 accounts after we informed the company of the activity.
Workers said used car scams are also pervasive on Marketplace. We identified thousands of bogus listings for used cars with minimal effort. Scammers hack into profiles and use them to post dozens of listings for the same vehicle targeted at different parts of the US.
Once again, scam vehicle listings posted by hacked accounts started showing up in my recommendations. I was often served a mix of truck scams, ED posts, and other listings that violated FB’s rules.
Marketplace contract workers said they rarely, if ever, stop someone from getting ripped off. And until recently, they had largely unfettered access to Facebook Messenger inboxes. This resulted in people spying on romantic partners and other privacy violations, workers said.
Facebook said Marketplace workers no longer have access to Messenger inboxes. Instead, workers can access Marketplace messages during an investigation. FB said it has a zero-tolerance policy for ppl who break its rules. (Workers confirmed people have been fired for snooping.)
Internal documents show Marketplace workers have to be familiar with a dizzying array of global scams being perpetrated on the service. Multiple countries have been labeled “high risk” due to the prevalence of scams originating from them. Benin is one such country.
Documents said scammers based there use fake and hacked accounts to run listings for scam loans and male enhancement products. Yet in spite of the “unusually high scam prevalence” in Benin, Facebook officially launched Marketplace there last month.
We looked at cases where police say criminals used Marketplace to lure victims for armed robbery/murder. One involved Joshua Gorgone of Penn. Police say he stabbed a woman to death when she came to his apartment to buy a fridge he’d listed on Marketplace. He pled not guilty.
On Facebook, Gorgone went by the user name Thraxx Mula and had a gun in his profile’s background image. Months after being charged with murder, his profile was still online with four Marketplace listings. FB removed it after being contacted by us. The company declined to comment.
There’s *lots* more in the story, including a look at people fencing stolen goods on Marketplace, and some of the measures taken by eBay and Craigslist to rein in scams which Facebook has yet to adopt. Reporting by me, @ACInvestigates + @peterelkind: propublica.org/article/facebo…
Coda: As a result of reporting this story, my Marketplace recommendations are still garbage and now I’m being shown Cialis and Viagra ads nonstop on Facebook...
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For years Qinbin Chen made a living thanks to Walmart. How?
By laundering $7 million in fraudulently obtained gift cards through its stores.
Walmart knew fraud was happening all over the US. It promised two state AGs to stop it. It didn't. Our deep dive: propublica.org/article/walmar…
We found that Walmart has long been a facilitator of fraud on a mass scale. The company has resisted tougher enforcement, broken promises to regulators and skimped on employee training. Over 10 years, more than $1 billion was stolen from victims and routed through its stores.
The money flowed through Walmart's financial services business, which offers check cashing, money transfers, branded debit, gift and credit cards. Its scale and lax controls have provided fraudsters with a convenient place to send victims and to move money overseas.
Over 10 years, more than $1 billion was stolen from Americans and routed through Walmart stores. Romance scams, IRS scams, anti-virus scams – people got tricked by global fraudsters. Time and again, victims were sent to Walmart.
We found that Walmart’s lax oversight and poor employee training made it easier for scammers to extract money from victims and to move stolen funds overseas. It happened with Walmart gift cards, it happened with money transfers.
Kay Jenkins, a Miami realtor/model, was losing income because her Insta kept getting banned. She paid someone she thought was a Meta employee $8,000 for reactivation.
We spoke to people with over 45 million total Insta followers who were targeted by OBN. They say Meta failed to help, or to take OBN seriously. At least one person is suing. Others hired lawyers. But OBN continued to run wild, mocking Meta and police as he banned and scammed.
OBN is part of a thriving underground economy of account banners/scammers who shut down profiles and demand payment to reactivate them. He exploits Instagram’s slow and often ineffective customer support and manipulates its account reporting systems.
NEW investigation & 🧵: Google runs the world’s biggest ad network, but it conceals most of the publishers it works with and where it places billions of ad $$$. We cracked open one of the world's most lucrative black boxes and found piracy, porn, & fraud: propublica.org/article/google…
The Google Display Network places ads on millions of websites and apps in more than 200 countries. It works with huge publishers, solo bloggers, game apps etc. and earned Google $31 billion in 2021. Which sites and apps does Google work with and send $$$ to? Sorry, it’s a secret.
Google stands alone in its embrace of confidentiality. Data from Jounce Media shows how Google stacks up against competitors. Over 75% of its partners are “confidential,” opening the door to abuses and schemes that steal potentially billions a year from fraud, scams, disinfo.
New investigation & 🧵: Google's ad business is funneling revenue to some of the web’s most prolific purveyors of health, election & climate disinfo in Europe, Latin America & Africa.
Google placed ads on a site in Bosnia and Herzegovina for months after the U.S. government sanctioned it, calling it the “personal media station” of a major Bosnian Serb separatist politician. Here’s a Guess ad on a false story on the site claiming Serbia had a cure for COVID-19
Google placed ads for:
-Amazon, Spotify, BetMGM on article w/ false claim that COVID vaccines change DNA
-St. John clothing on Serbian article saying cat owners don’t catch COVID
-American Red Cross on a far-right German site’s story claiming COVID-19 is comparable to the flu
Meet Goody. He sells jewelry in Miami. He also had musician profiles on Spotify/Apple/Google & articles about his songs. His is one of 100s of fake musician personas created to get verified on Instagram/FB.
Our investigation uncovered what’s likely the largest Instagram verification scheme. @biancafortis & I found crypto bros, OnlyFans models, a cannabis co., surgeon, reality TV stars & others were turned into fake musicians as part of an elaborate scheme. propublica.org/article/instag…
Here’s what the Spotify profiles looked like for a controversial Toronto plastic surgeon, two stars of the MTV show Siesta Key, and an OnlyFans model. All lost their Instagram badges after we contacted Meta.