Cybercrime Groups Using Vishing and SSO Abuse in Rapid SaaS Extortion Attacks
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You’re scrolling through Facebook or TikTok and see it.
A flash sale from a brand you recognize. A limited-time investment opportunity. A job posting that promises quick money.
The ad has comments. The account looks polished. Maybe someone you follow even liked it.
So you click.
From there, things move fast. You’re pushed to act quickly, enter your information, or send payment before the “deal” disappears. And just like that, the money is gone or your account is compromised.
This isn’t an edge case anymore. According to new FTC data, nearly 30% of people who reported losing money to a scam in 2025 said it started on social media, with total losses hitting $2.1 billion.
That’s why McAfee+ Advanced includes comprehensive protection designed to help you spot and stop scams at every step, including McAfee’s Scam Detector, which flags suspicious links and messages and explains why they may be risky, along with identity and privacy tools that help protect your information if a scam slips through.
A social media ad scam is when scammers use paid ads, fake profiles, or hijacked accounts on platforms like Facebook, Instagram, or TikTok to promote fake products, services, or investment opportunities in order to steal money or personal information.
| Step | What happens | What to do | How McAfee helps |
| 1 | You see an ad, post, or DM promoting a deal, job, or investment | Don’t engage immediately, even if it looks legitimate | Scam Detector flags suspicious links and messages before you interact |
| 2 | The ad links to a website or moves you into DMs | Avoid clicking unfamiliar links or continuing off-platform | Safe Browsing helps block risky or newly created websites |
| 3 | You’re pressured to act quickly or “secure your spot” | Slow down and verify the company independently | Scam Detector explains urgency tactics and why they’re risky |
| 4 | You’re asked to pay, share login info, or download something | Never send money or credentials based on a social media interaction | Identity Monitoring helps protect your personal data if exposed |
| 5 | The product never arrives, the investment disappears, or your account is compromised | Report the scam and secure your accounts immediately | Personal Data Cleanup and monitoring help reduce ongoing exposure |
And that is the first part of This Week in Scams! This Friday we’re taking a different format to talk about this new FTC data and all that it reveals.
Let’s keep digging in:
New data from the FTC shows just how dominant social media has become in the scam landscape.
| Category | What to know |
| Most common scams | Shopping scams lead, with over 40% of victims reporting purchases from social media ads that never arrived |
| Most costly scams | Investment scams drive the biggest losses, often starting with ads or group chats showing fake success |
| What’s changing | Scammers are using platform tools like ads, targeting, and profile data to reach people more precisely than ever |
| Platform | How scams typically start | What to watch for |
| Ads, Marketplace listings, hacked accounts | Fake stores, duplicate listings, urgent purchase pressure | |
| Sponsored posts, influencer impersonation | “Limited drop” scams, fake brand collaborations | |
| TikTok | Ads, stolen videos/profiles, comment links, bio links, | “Get rich quick” schemes, external link funnels, reselling via TikTok |
| Group chats, investment communities | Fake testimonials, coordinated pressure to invest |
McAfee+ Advanced gives you multiple layers working together so you are not left figuring it out after the damage is done:
Our advice based on this week’s scams and schemes:
And we’ll be back next week with more scams making headlines.
The post Ad Impersonation Scams and Record-Breaking Social Media Fraud Losses: This Week in Scams appeared first on McAfee Blog.