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Many residents of Macomb County, Michigan, thought the comments were offensive. A Facebook post from County Prosecutor Pete Lucido’s office noted that a local high school teacher and two parents had been arraigned in connection with a drug deal. In the comments section, a note appearing to be from Lucido stated, “Spread this story so everyone knows what happens when you let Detroit spill over into OUR neighborhoods!”
In another post, Lucido purportedly disparaged a commenter as “another whiny liberal” and instructed the person to “go play with your terrorist friends at another Black Lives Matter rally.” But Lucido quickly issued a statement denying responsibility for the January posts.
He was the victim, he said, of social media cloning: when scammers create a fake Facebook or Instagram account using someone else’s identity.
How social media cloning scams work
Cloning accounts, also known as duplicate or copycat accounts, is not new, but the problem persists for a simple reason: Fake accounts are effective and easy to create.
Scammers simply copy your name, photo and personal information to create an account that appears to be yours. Next, they scan your friend list and send friend requests to people you know. Because the request is seemingly from you, your friends and family are not only likely to accept it but may trust the impostor’s messages, which can include not only political rants, as with Lucido, but phishing schemes and links that download malware, as well as requests for personal information and, you guessed it, money.
“It may be something along the lines of ‘I’m stuck in Europe and someone stole my wallet. Can you please send me $100?’ ” says Josh Kirschner, founder and CEO of Techlicious, a site that publishes reviews and articles on consumer technology. If a friend of yours receives that message and thinks it’s really from you, they might send that money.
Conversely, Kirschner adds, when you accept an impostor’s friend request, that person now has “a channel into your Facebook feed. They can start spamming your account. They can post links to fraudulent websites or send you information about Bitcoin investments or whatever it may be.”
Although cloning can occur on any social media platform, it seems most prolific on Facebook and Instagram. In the third quarter of 2024 alone, Facebook took action against 1.1 billion fake accounts, Statista reported in February.
If you’ve ever received a friend request from someone who’s already a friend — or had a pal message you “Did you just send me a friend request?” — you’ve probably dealt with a cloned account. Here are some ways to fight back.
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