Did supermarket chain ALDI announce they are giving away $75 coupons to everyone who shares a link and fills out a survey, just because it is their anniversary? No, that's not true: a group of scammers is at it again with a fake Aldi page designed to steal personal information and/or spam users with ads.
The scam was published on a website named grabite.win on November 17, 2019 titled "Aldi has announced that everyone who shares this link will be sent $75 Coupon for it's anniversary. TODAY ONLY" (archived here) which opened:
It's our anniversary!Remaining Time: Loading..
Answer a few questions to get your $75 Coupon from Aldi!
To get the free Coupon, you must first answer a few questions.Question 1: Are you Older than 18?
Users on social media only saw this title, description and thumbnail:
Aldi has announced that everyone who shares this link will be sent $75 Coupon for it's anniversary. TODAY ONLY
Aldi Anniversary
The site is part of a larger network of scam websites that all operate in the same manner. First three or four questions are asked, typically asking if you are satisified with some brand, if you have used their product or if you would recommend it to others. Three possible answers are offered each time, typically something very simple like "Yes", "No" or "Don't remember".
No matter what answers are given, visitors are redirected to a screen that looks like this, inviting them to share and like the page on Facebook to claim the prize:
The comment form that appears at the bottom of some of the scams is also fake: comments are automatically appearing but they do not come from real people, the whole thing is scripted: if the page is reloaded the same comments start appearing again. Clicking the share button does bring up a real share popup from Facebook but it does not share the exact URL of the page: it varies the random-looking string of letters and numbers at the end so that to Facebook it will look like a new and different article that is being shared. This makes it harder to detect and do something about it because each individual link needs to be individually reported and taken down.
Clicking the like button takes people through a series of redirects via various pages, probably depending on which ads or scams the people behind the site need to promote at the time. But no prize will show up at your door in the end.
The scammers behind the site regularily launch new sites targeting different brands and businesses but they all look similar. arlier versions we spotted were aimed at Dunkin' Donuts, JetBlue, Starbucks, Costco, Little Caesars, Alaska Airline and Delta Airlines.