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Report: #1015947

Complaint Review: VRBO/HomeAway Vacation Rental Scam - Internet

  • Submitted:
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  • Reported By: JDubSki — Colorado Springs Colorado United States of America
  • Author Confirmed What's this?
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  • VRBO/HomeAway Vacation Rental Scam Internet United States of America

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Users attempting to rent vacation properties on the VRBO.com/HomeAway.com websites are becoming frequent victims of internet scams based on email phishing attacks described in the article below from consumer advocate website elliot.com. VRBO listing 156539 is one of the property listings on the site which apparently has fallen victim to this attack.

Shauna Kattler thought shed found the ideal rental home in Playa del Carmen, Mexico, for her Christmas
vacation: a two-bedroom penthouse condominium with a hot tub and an impossibly perfect view of the Caribbean.

And she was getting it for the impossibly low peak-season rate of $450 a night through HomeAway.com, a popular vacation rental Web site.
Impossibly being the operative word.

Shortly after Kattler, a relocation specialist from Kirkland, Wash., wired the money to Mexico, she discovered that shed paid the wrong person. Her vacation dollars didnt go to the property owner, but to someone who had stolen the owners e-mail password and assumed his identity through a crime called phishing.
Sound familiar? It should.
This past fall, I reported about new phishing problems on HomeAway and another site it owns, VRBO.com. I introduced you to Tania Rieben, who lost $4,300 at the slippery fingers of a scam artist posing as a vacation rental owner in Maui.
Since then, Ive heard from many more phishing victims who wired money to shady characters pretending to hold the keys to a HomeAway vacation rental. And Ive heard from HomeAway, which says its taking steps to prevent future phishing attacks and help the customers who have lost money. More on its efforts in a second.
Lets get back to Kattler. She tried calling the property, but the person who answered hung up on her repeatedly. Finally, she contacted HomeAway, which reviewed her e-mail correspondence and confirmed her suspicions: Shed been scammed.
This is not a case of fraudulent activity on the HomeAway.com site, but is a case of the owners e-mail account being compromised, the company added. HomeAway.com takes all fraudulent activities seriously, but our responsibility cannot extend to actions on private e-mail accounts.

Kattler is understandably frustrated. She says HomeAway should refund the $4,500 she spent for 10 nights that shell never use. After all, the crime happened because of one of its listings. All they can say is Im sorry,? she says. HomeAway is not taking any responsibility for the lack of security on their Web site.
Actually, HomeAway is doing more than apologizing, but it isnt taking full responsibility for the incidents, either. Thats because the company insists that the crimes arent being committed through its Web site. In response to cases such as Kattlers, it recently expanded its optional Carefree Rental Guarantee to cover phishing losses.
Its also working with its current phishing victims there are 18, it says to negotiate a resolution between the property owner and the guest.
HomeAway suspends a rentals listing after a phishing incident until the security breach is plugged, which means that the property owner gets a new e-mail address. In most of the cases, we do come up with a solution that makes everyone happy, says Carl Shepherd, the co-founder of HomeAway.
Last month, HomeAway also warned the 625,000 property owners and managers with listings on the site about the phishing threat and offered them advice on how to protect themselves. Its encouraging its owners to use an optional new system called Reservation Manager that offers bank-level security for bookings made online.
Shepherd says customers could easily prevent phishing incidents by calling the property to verify that theyre e-mailing the correct person. Criminals havent figured out a way of spoofing a phone number at least not yet.
To that advice, I would add the following: Never wire money. Every phishing incident Ive tried to mediate every last one starts with someone reluctantly sending money to a stranger. Once its gone, theres no getting it back. With a credit card, at least youre protected and can dispute a bogus charge.
The phishing problem isnt unique to HomeAway. Other vacation rental customers have also recently been targeted. But HomeAways guests seem to be the most vocal. Many of them contacted me to ask for help after the first column I wrote about phishing. The company reports that some of these disputes have already been resolved.
But not all of them. Kattlers grievance is still under investigation. She flew to Mexico as scheduled and paid another $2,000
for accommodations.
And Riebens case may never be solved. The real property manager in Maui says that he warned Rieben that he was the only point of contact for the rental but that Rieben tried to find the owner and then stumbled into a trap, according to HomeAway.
Although the property has offered her alternative dates for a stay in Maui, no agreement has been reached.
We feel horrible for her, Shepherd says.
So do I.

This report was posted on Ripoff Report on 02/17/2013 08:22 PM and is a permanent record located here: https://www.ripoffreport.com/reports/vrbohomeaway-vacation-rental-scam/internet/vrbohomeaway-vacation-rental-scam-vacation-rental-scam-internet-1015947. The posting time indicated is Arizona local time. Arizona does not observe daylight savings so the post time may be Mountain or Pacific depending on the time of year. Ripoff Report has an exclusive license to this report. It may not be copied without the written permission of Ripoff Report. READ: Foreign websites steal our content

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#3 Author of original report

Valid VRBO property listing

AUTHOR: JDubSki - (United States of America)

POSTED: Tuesday, February 19, 2013

The VRBO property listing reporting in the initial report has been found to NOT be a subject of this phishing scam.

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#2 Author of original report

Correction

AUTHOR: JDubSki - (United States of America)

POSTED: Monday, February 18, 2013

After further investigation it has been found that  the VRBO property id listed in this report has has not been a victim of these phishing scams. The property id listing is a valid listing.

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#1 Author of original report

Correction

AUTHOR: JDubSki - (United States of America)

POSTED: Monday, February 18, 2013

The VRBO property id listed in this report, upon further research, has been found to not be subject to this phishing scam. Apologies to the property owner for this incorrect information.

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