Thu. Aug 29th, 2024

Sephoreview.com $750 Sephora Job Scam: A Subscription Trap

By Samantha Aug3,2024

Sephoreview.com might seem like a legit site to work as a Sephora product tester/reviewer, but it’s a well disguised scam. If you’re considering giving the offer a chance, here’s a breakdown of what you should know, as investigated by Cybersecurity professionals.

Sephoreview.com Details

Sephoreview.com claims you can earn $750 Sephora Gift Card for reviewing Sephora products. The brand ‘Sephora’ makes makeup, skincare, beauty, fragrance and hair products. The offer on Sephoreview.com might seem like an ideal work from home opportunity but it’s actually a scam.

Red Flags

Not a Legit Sephora Jobs Website

Sephoreview.com is not an official Sephora job website. In fact, there’s only one website for Sephora job application ( jobs.sephora.com) it provides all available job openings.

Recently Launched Website

Sephoreview.com was created on June 2024 and expires June 2025. This shows there’s no long term plan, and as such it lacks reputation.

Anonymous Owner

Who.is (a website domain checker tool) reveals registration details of sephoreview.com. According to the information provided, the registrant details is redacted for privacy. Clearly, the people behind Sephoreview are hiding their information from the public.

Among a Network of Scam Websites

Sephoreview.com is part of a large network of scam posting fake Product reviewer/tester job opportunities. Eg – Samples500.com, Croosh.co, e.t.c. The websites are all recently registered, not affiliated with the brands mentioned, and may have malware running in the background.

How The Sephoreview.com Subscription Scam Works

Upon clicking the ‘Start Review’ button on sephoreview.com, users are redirected to different unsecured websites eg ‘awesomedealsfinder.com’ and made to click on shady links. At the process, their email address, telephone number, would be requested to complete some deals/surveys.

The deals include answering some sneaky security questions, clicking on random links, etc. However, there’s no gift card at the end. Rather users are lured into sneaky subscription plans when they submit their email address.

Though you don’t provide a ton of information, you subscribe to a bunch of daily emails, which in and of themselves aren’t suspicious, but are several phishing sites waiting for your information.

Consequences of Signing Up on Sephoreview.com

Personal Information Theft

When users click on deals on sephoreview.com they’re made to tick a terms and conditions box. By so doing, they give the fraudsters permission to sell their information to big data companies. This info includes – email address, IP address, browser type, cookies, device type, operating system, buying preferences, online behaviours, e.t.c

Malware

Sephoreview.com and its associated websites are not properly secured. There’s a likelihood that there’s malware program running in the background. Malware is a software that is specifically designed to disrupt, damage, or gain unauthorized access to a computer system. It could also be used to steal your personal and financial information which would then be sold to the darkweb.

What To Do If You’re a Victim of This Scam

If you’ve already visited sephoreview.com and clicked a bunch of links, here’s what to do;

Check Your Device for Viruses and Malware – Since you visited lots of malicious websites, it is important that you install anti-virus software  and scan your device for viruses that may have been downloaded.

Monitor your email – Over the next few days and weeks you’re going to receive a lot of emails that may likely end up in your spam folder. Endeavour to flag it as spam and report any suspicious email that appears on your Inbox. Also, do not click on any link attached in it as it could be a phishing attempt.

By Samantha

I am Samantha, a Cyber Security enthusiast. I kicked off my passion as a Cyber Fraud Researcher during the Covid19 pandemic when I saw lots of people falling victims to fraudulent websites pretending to sell disinfectants, masks and wipes. Since then, I've helped thousands of people avoid being scammed by providing timely alerts on trending scams and tips on how to stay protected.

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