I know now if I have to order something online I definitely will be looking up where the seller is even Walmart
has many products that ships from China. It's like big spider web anymore, especially anything Electronic.
I have already been checking that more for the shipping time but this makes it more serious to me.
I had a letter from Malwarebytes I hadn't opened until just now. It talks bout fake online stores which fits in my concerns
about looking up where the seller/shipper is from. I imagine though these will use a fake place of business.
Malwarebytes has more about this scam I didn't want to plaster several pages on here.
Here is the first part of it. If it interests you go to
www.malwarebytes.com see the rest of this plus more.
browser addy
Inside a network of 20,000+ fake shops
Polished storefronts, empty warehouses
Fake shops are fraudulent websites designed to look and feel like legitimate online retailers. They have product listings, brand logos, customer reviews, shopping carts, and functional-looking checkout pages. They just never deliver what they promise. In some cases, victims receive nothing at all. In others, they get a cheap knockoff worth a fraction of the advertised price.
Either way, the product being sold is your data: these fake shops harvest your payment credentials, billing addresses, and personal details and then resell them on criminal marketplaces or use them directly for identity fraud.
The scale of the problem has exploded. According to
recent threat intelligence data, fake e-shop scams rose by 790% in the first quarter of 2025 compared to the same period the year before, driven in part by economic anxiety around trade tariffs pushing consumers toward bargain alternatives.
During the 2024 holiday season alone,
researchers identified over 80,000 fake stores, many of which disappeared or rebranded within days. Industry telemetry from late 2025 found that fake shops accounted for 65% of all threats blocked on social media, with Facebook and YouTube as the primary launchpads.
These operations are increasingly industrialized.
Researchers recently documented FraudWear, a coordinated campaign involving over 30,000 fraudulent stores impersonating more than 350 fashion brands worldwide.
Another
investigation uncovered BogusBazaar, a franchise-style network where a core team maintained the servers, payment processing, and template infrastructure, while decentralized operators spun up individual shops on top of it. That network processed over a million orders across 75,000 domains since 2021.
Fake shops succeed because they use familiar shopping behavior: clicking on ads, following search results, and landing on polished-looking sites. They layer psychological pressure on top, with limited-time offers, countdown timers, and disappearing stock warnings.