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The consumer champion looked at scams appearing on online platforms and found blatant fraudulent advertising, from copycats of major retail brands to investment scams and ‘recovery’ scams, which target previous victims of scams. Scam adverts using the identities of celebrities such as Richard Branson, despite them having nothing to do with the ads, also continue to target consumers. In November and December 2023, the consumer champion combed the biggest social media sites: Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, X (formerly Twitter) and YouTube. Researchers also looked at the two biggest search engines, Google and Bing. Which? researchers could easily find a range of obvious scam adverts, even though the landmark Online Safety Act had received Royal Assent weeks earlier. The Act will not officially come into force on scam adverts until after Ofcom finalizes the codes of practice, which the regulator will use to set the standard platforms must meet. Which? is concerned the findings suggest online platforms may not be taking scam adverts seriously enough and will continue to inadvertently profit from the misery inflicted by fraudsters until the threat of multi-million-pound fines becomes a reality. This is why Ofcom must make sure that its online safety codes of practice prioritize fraud prevention and takedown. While it is positive the government has passed key legislation such as the Online Safety Act, it is now time to appoint a dedicated fraud minister to make fighting fraud a national priority. Which? used a variety of methods including setting up fresh social media accounts for the investigation. Researchers tailored these accounts to interests frequently targeted by scam advertisers, such as shopping with big-name retailers, competitions and money-saving deals, investments, weight-loss gummies, and getting help to recover money after a scam. Researchers also scoured ad libraries – the searchable databases of adverts that are available for Facebook, Instagram, and TikTok – and investigated scams reported by some of the 26,000 members of its Which? Scam Action and Alerts community on Facebook. Which? captured scams they came across in the course of everyday browsing and scrolling for personal use. Researchers collected more than 90 examples of potentially fraudulent adverts. Whenever they were confident of something being a scam and in-site scam reporting tools were available, they reported the adverts. Most platforms did not update on the outcome of these reports. The exception was Microsoft, the parent company of Bing, which confirmed an advert had violated its standards and said it would act but did not specify how. Which? found what it considered to be clear examples of scam adverts on Bing, Facebook, Google, Instagram, and X. On Meta’s ad library, Which? found Facebook and Instagram hosting multiple copycat adverts impersonating major retailers around the time of the Black Friday sales, including electricals giant Currys plus clothing brands River Island and Marks & Spencer. Each advert attempted to lure victims to bogus sites in a bid to extract their payment details. On YouTube and TikTok, Which? found sponsored videos in which individuals without Financial Conduct Authority authorization gave often highly inappropriate investment advice. While these are not necessarily scam videos and would not come under the remit of the new laws, they are nonetheless extremely concerning Which? has shared these examples with the platforms. An advert impersonating Currys, appearing on both Facebook and Instagram, attempted to lure in victims by claiming to offer ‘90% off on a wide range of products’. However, it went through to a completely different URL and was a scam to lure in shoppers. On X, a dodgy advert led to a fake BBC website and featured an article falsely using Martin Lewis to endorse a dodgy company called Quantum AI, which promotes itself as a crypto-get-rich-quick platform. Beneath the advert was a note added by the platform with some context added by other site users, known as readers’ notes. It warned that: ‘This is yet another crypto scam using celebrities’. Despite the warning, the advert remained live. For more visit OUR FORUM.