Father’s Day in the UK (June 19) is almost upon us, and scammers are taking advantage of it—and the fractional possibility of some nice weather—using a barbeque-themed lure.
A mysterious WhatsApp message
The barbeque bait arrives out of the blue, from a somebody who has your number, as a random message bringing word of a supposed “B&Q Father’s Day Contest” with what looks like a very nice barbeque set up for grabs. What could go wrong? (B&Q is a British multinational DIY / home improvement companyand exactly the kind of place someone in the UK might buy a nice barbeque set from.)
The message is plausible, and the only clue that something is amiss, other than it being unsolicited, is the Russian .ru
domain name.
Regular readers would know to steer clear of this missive, perhaps even ask the sender via other means if they meantto send the message. The problem with this one is that they probably didintend to send it (you’ll see why later).
If your name’s not down, you’re not coming in
The linked site really does notlike you visiting from anything other than a mobile browser. Try to access from a desktop, and you’ll be told “Access Denied”. Firing up VPNs or Tor Browser, designed to help keep your online activities anonymous, seem to have a similar end result. All they want you to do is click the original link from your mobile.
As it happens, there isa reason for this. It wouldn’t be cost-effective for promotions to allow non-mobile visitors onto a mobile themed offering. This is because said mobile offerings want to take advantage of something your desktop won’t have. It could be a feature specific to Android or iPhone, or perhaps they have a certain app in their sights.
Click the link on your mobile from the correct geographic region and you’ll make it to the landing page. If not, you’ll probably be turned away.
The Father’s Day Contest landing page
Visitors are greeted by what appears to be a B&Q-themed page.
The site says
Welcome to the B&Q Father’s Day Contest!
Take the quiz, find the hidden prize and win the new Weber gas barbeque
The Weber is a fancy bit of kit, retailing for around $1,200. Small wonder that people would be happy to take the quiz. The quiz itself is a collection of 4 questions including:
- Do you know of B&Q?
- How old are you?
- How would you rate B&Q?
With these out of the way, it’s competition time.
Best out of 3?
Visitors are presented with 9 gift boxes, and have 3 chances to select the correct one.
Sadly I failed on my first box opening, but hit the barbeque-shaped jackpot on my second attempt. Do I get my barbeque set? Not yet:
First, the scammers tell you to “share with 5 groups / 20 friends on WhatsApp” to claim your gift, with the offer only being valid for 500 seconds. This is why you get the message from a friend, and this is how it spreads.
Try as I might, the site wouldn’t let me progress past this stage. If you refresh the page, the number of gifts resets to the original amount of 250 and then stops at a low number. Just enough to make you think there’s a few left. Does anybody reallythink they’re giving away around $300,000 of barbeque equipment every few minutes?
There’s also multiple Facebook-style comments at the bottom of the page, complete with inactive Like and Reply options underneath each one of the other supposed winners.
Based on how these things usually go, you probably have to hand over personal information to an advertiser. There’s no FAQ, EULA, competition rules, or privacy policy on the landing page; merely a copyright notice at the bottom listed as “Advertorial”.
As tempting an offer as this sounds, we’d advise anyone looking for a gift this Father’s Day to keep shopping around.