It’s a scam
that’s more likely to disrupt the checkout line than your credit
line. So why should you care about a current surge in counterfeit
coupons? Well, try to use them and you could pay a price far
greater—would you believe getting arrested?—than any savings you
might get if the checkout clerk is fooled by the coupon and gives you
the discount.
As more
cash-strapped consumers turn to the Internet for print-to-save
offers, hackers
have taken notice, creating a virtual explosion of online
coupon
scams. It’s a funny kind of game—in most cases, the people who
create the counterfeits don’t have any way to profit from them. The
goal just seems to be to gain “street cred” in the hacker
community by creating something that turns up all over the country.
No doubt some of these folks fancy themselves modern-day Robin Hoods,
helping the down-and-out rip off merchants. But here’s how
counterfeit coupons can hurt you—and why you need to be vigilant
trying to pinch pennies online.
Clicking on links
promising an online coupon—especially when the links are
distributed via e-mail or posted at online message forums—can
infect your computer with malware that provides hackers with your
files, passwords and online bank account numbers. One way you can
almost guarantee you’ll be burned is to enter an online auction for
a batch of coupons. Chances are good that they’ll be
counterfeit—and never be delivered, even if you “win” the
auction. But if you do succeed in downloading counterfeit coupons and
printing them out, your problems may just be beginning. Hackers try
to make each coupon so realistic that it’ll scan at the cash
register just like a real one. But often the fake gets flagged by
registers or alert employees. What happens then? It’s at best
embarrassing. Your coupon is refused. Or you might be banned from the
store. And “some people have been arrested for redeeming
counterfeit coupons,” says Bud Miller of the Coupon
Information Corporation,
a watchdog group that represents most U.S. food, beauty and other
product manufacturers that issue coupons. Law enforcement agencies
also go after the coupons’ creators.
Even if you don’t
get caught, there’s a social issue to consider. Your redemption of
a fake coupon raises the store’s costs of doing business—totals
can add up to millions of dollars. These costs get passed along to
customers in the form of higher prices. “And because this problem
is so widespread, some retailers are now refusing any online
print-at-home coupons, which hurts all shoppers.”
Bogus coupon or not?
- If it’s free, then flee. “There are no legitimate offers for free products, without any purchase, that can be printed from a home computer,” says Miller. Authentic online freebies require you to sign up, and the manufacturer then mails the coupon to you. But real buy-one, get-one free coupons and those promising a percentage or specific amount off can be printed online.
- If a coupon is displayed onscreen as an image, it’s usually counterfeit or unauthorized. Manufacturers avoid showing actual coupons to prevent their replication.
- Legitimate coupons always list an expiration date, and typically a specific product size. This info is often absent in fakes.
- For real print-and-use savings, stick to offers at manufacturers’ websites or reputable coupon sites such as www.coupons.com, www.coolsavings.com and www.couponmom.com. Unless you have previously enrolled at a website to get coupon offers, don’t click on any e-mailed offers you receive.
- If you wonder if a particular coupon is real, go to a page on the Coupon Information Corporation site where you can see images of phony coupons.
-Fakes are
everywhere, adhere to these tips and don't be fooled -Birdy.
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