Don't Let Your Friends Get Suckered by This iPhone 12 Scam
No, youâre not getting an iPhone 12, not now, and certainly not for free. As of this writing, there is no iPhone 12âit only exists in the realm of rumor and fantasy until Apple actually announces the thingâbut that hasnât stopped scammers from using it as a lure to draw in unsuspecting victims.
Some people are being suckered by text messages that suggest theyâve been âselectedâ for a special opportunity to receive a free iPhone 12 (a phone that, again, isnât available for purchase). You probably know better than to buy into such a scam, but youâre a seasoned Lifehacker reader. Unfortunately, not everyone is so astute.
Certainly you might one day be able to get a âfreeâ iPhone 12. The process will involve a mobile carrier asking you to jump through an additional hoops that earn them money, like adding extra lines of service to your existing plan, trading in an old phone or switching providers outright. Youâll then get a âfreeâ phone, sure, but youâll be paying for it with whatever arrangement you made. You always pay for it, somehow.
The scam text messages are written as if they were meant for someone else but were accidentally sent to you. They require you to click on a link to enter into a special âApple 2020 Testing Program.â Because, you know, Apple needs everyday people to test prerelease hardware. That totally happens all the time.
As Sophos describes:
â...if you do click through the questions then you end up on a scam site (there were several variations, all similar â we tried the smish repeatedly) where you find thereâs a courier delivery charge for the âfreeâ phone, typically between ÂŁ1 and ÂŁ2.
Then you end up on a credit card payment form thatâs hosted on what looks like a âspecial offersâ website with a a believable enough name, and with an HTTPS security padlock if you take the time to look.
Of course, if you try to pay your modest delivery charge, you are simply handing over your personal data to the crooks, including your full card number and security code.â
Basic, right? But, again, youâre smart. People who arenât quite so good about technology or phishing, or are simply bewitched by the idea of shiny new Apple hardware, are more likely to tap on that link out of curiosity. The astute among them will recognize the scam for what it is, but clearly there are enough people out there willing to blindly give up their credit cards that the phishing attempt is worthwhile.
Letâs review the basics of how to spot a scam (again)
There are plenty of useful tips to unpack from this âfree iPhone 12" offer and share with your less cautious friends and relatives. First, itâs rare that anyone legitimate is going to offer you something for free that will probably cost $700 or more. Second, no big player in tech is going to just give out hardware that hasnât been released yet. That kind of defeats the whole point of, you know, a product announcement.
Then thereâs the obvious issue of a message like this coming to you as a text, of all things, with no information indicating the sender knows who you are, nor any suggestion of what youâve done to receive such an incredible windfall. New iPhones donât just drop out of the sky, after all.
Third, the âofferâ doesnât do more than the bare minimum to appear genuine. The hyperlink in the scammy textâwhich you can see in Sophosâ postâdoesnât even point to a real Apple website. Itâs a link to âhttps://apple.co.uk/2020promo,â which goes nowhere if you simply copy and paste that into a browserâs address bar (instead of tapping on the link). Tapping on said link pulls up a phony site, a fact that should be obvious to almost anyone.
Finally, there are the raw mechanics of the offer. Apple is ârich AF,â as the kids say. It wastes more money in a day than most people will ever see in a lifetime. It doesnât need you to pay shipping for anything if itâs giving you that item for free. Say what you will about the cost of everything else Apple does, but the company can certainly afford FedEx if itâs going to ship you an iPhone 12âwhich it isnât, because come on already.
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