Better Business Bureau issue warnings about email scam to Maple Valley, Covington residents

The scam that fraudulently uses Better Business Bureau’s name will not die. Reports indicate that businesses are once again receiving emails from impostors claiming to represent BBB, according to a Feb. 17 BBB media release from the bureau’s DuPont office.

The scam that fraudulently uses Better Business Bureau’s name will not die.

Reports indicate that businesses are once again receiving emails from impostors claiming to represent BBB, according to a Feb. 17 BBB media release from the bureau’s DuPont office.

Senders state that complaints have been filed and that recipients must click on enclosed links or provide other personal information to address the complaints.

The emails are a scam. The enclosed links may contain viruses and malware that could damage computers and place identities at risk.

Scan BBB emails for typos; obvious grammatical errors are an indication that emails are counterfeit.

Check the senders’ email addresses; complaint notices are generated by local BBBs and not from the Council of Better Business Bureaus or CBBB.

Hover the mouse cursor over enclosed links; beware if Web addresses do not reflect bbb.org.

Tip: Copy and paste enclosed links directly into text editors that do not support HTML—such as Notepad—and the direct links will be shown.

The Better Business Bureau serving Alaska, Oregon and Western Washington reminds businesses that while BBB does send complaint notices by mail, email and fax, the best way to verify the legitimacy of any official-looking correspondence is to immediately contact the local BBB office.

Report scams at bbb.org/scam/report-a-scam and forward suspicious emails to phishing@council.bbb.org.