By Jane Wakefield
Technology reporter
In the last weekend of August, when Emma Heathcote-James had been looking forward to a relaxing bank-holiday break, she instead found herself fighting to save her company’s reputation.
She had just discovered the Instagram page for her beauty-product business, which she had spent 12 years building up, had been cloned.
“For some reason the scammers tagged me in one of the photos, which seems like it was probably a mistake,” she says.
And this alerted her to the cloned page, where the only discernible difference from the legitimate Little Soap Co’s page was an extra “o” at the end of the name.
PayPal details
As well as making a carbon copy of the page, the scammers were intent on making some money.
“The account went private and we discovered that they spent the entire evening on bank-holiday Monday contacting hundreds of our followers, who had entered our latest competition, saying they had won and asking for PayPal details,” Emma says.
At least one of her customers responded but she does not know how many more were affected or who lost money.
And trying to persuade Instagram to remove the fake page proved frustrating.
Square one
“It was impossible to speak to a human at Instagram,” Emma tells BBC News.
“They make it so hard.
“We couldn’t log it as a business-impersonation account as the form to fill in takes you on a loop with nothing at the end, instead you are back to square one.
“It is like they don’t want to be contacted.
“It sent me demented.”
Facebook owns Instagram.
And Emma finally told a person or a software bot – she is not sure which – on Facebook Messenger about what she regarded as trademark infringements.
“I got an email back saying it wasn’t an infringement but that it breached the terms and conditions of the community guidelines,” she says.
“And the account was taken down.”
‘Very fortunate’
But it was a “cursory” email, devoid of any personal touch.
“It was like Facebook was saying, ‘Done – next,'” Emma says.
By then the issue had also been logged with the police, who told Emma such cloning was “rife”.
“We were very fortunate how speedily it was taken down,” she says.
“But we had three of us working on it.
“Not all businesses have this resource.”
‘Iron fortress’
And she remains angry about the way it was dealt with.
“Every other digital platform we pay to use has good customer service, whereas Facebook, which is a good shop window for many businesses, is very different,” Emma says.
“It feels like an iron fortress.
“It’s very hard to speak to anyone.
“And the chatbots aren’t yet intelligent enough to help.”
Fake accounts
Facebook told BBC News: “We have removed the accounts brought to our attention for inauthentic behaviour.
“We’re continuously investing in our teams and technology to identify and remove fraudulent activity, and have donated £3m to Citizens Advice to deliver a UK scam action programme, which spreads the word on how to avoid scams and offers support to people who have been affected.”
Every day, Facebook’s detection technology blocks millions of attempts to create fake accounts.
But account cloning remains a problem for both Facebook and Instagram, with individuals targeted alongside businesses.
Twitter and LinkedIn have to tackle similar scams.
Bitcoin scam
Cloning is remarkably easy to do.
He had the following advice:
- To avoid being cloned, search for your hashtags or reverse image search on Google to see if the pictures you have posted appear elsewhere
- If you are cloned, take a photo of yourself with some official ID and email Facebook
- If you receive a message from someone you don’t know requesting funds, do not send money
- If you receive a message from someone you know asking for money, check with them the message is real
Emma is certainly planning on keeping a very close eye on any suspicious activity around her brand and has since found another cloned account and two cloned versions of her personal Instagram page – all now removed.
“The whole thing is slightly sinister,” she says