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Google

Google Sues Scammers Over Fake Maps Listings (cbsnews.com) 16

Google has filed a lawsuit against alleged scammers who created and sold fake business profiles on Google Maps, the company said. The legal action follows an investigation that uncovered and eliminated more than 10,000 illegitimate listings.

The investigation began after a Texas business reported an unlicensed locksmith impersonating them on the platform. Google discovered the scams primarily targeted "duress verticals" -- services needed in urgent situations like locksmiths and towing companies. "Once we're alerted to the actual fraud, we take extreme efforts to identify similar fraudulent listings," said Halimah DeLaine Prado, Google's general counsel.

The scammers used tactics including bait-and-switch schemes and intercepting calls to legitimate businesses through "lead generation services." They also sold fraudulent positive reviews to suppress negative feedback.

Google Sues Scammers Over Fake Maps Listings

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  • by quonset ( 4839537 ) on Friday March 21, 2025 @11:18AM (#65249879)

    It's nice they're doing this on Maps, but the same applies when you do a search. For example, search for roofing repair in your area. Many of the top links are lead generation services. Get rid of them as well.

  • by RitchCraft ( 6454710 ) on Friday March 21, 2025 @11:30AM (#65249913)

    Trust nothing listed on the Internet (ads, reviews, business listings, etc.) and you'll be better off. Live likes it's 1995 again until this disaster called the Internet can be sorted out.

    • Trust nothing listed on the Internet (ads, reviews, business listings, etc.) and you'll be better off. Live likes it's 1995 again until this disaster called the Internet can be sorted out.

      gotta go back farther than that. 1995 is exactly when the Internet started its descent into the septic cesspool of scams and pornography that it currently is. In 1995, AOL's Steve Case opened a 2400 baud gateway to the internet for his idiot customer base, a monetized bottleneck that six million middle-class American morons who couldn’t tell a Usenet FAQ from a chain letter streamed through, polluting and corrupting everything they touched along the way. That was the exact moment the internet died.

    • Agreed. I've been finding myself saying, "if you want to get lost, use Google Maps." While it works sometimes, it seems to really be unreliable in cases I've relied on it to navigate places foreign to me. Many times, I have put in the exact and correct address only to be guided to an unrelated location in a different city that doesn't even have the same street name.
      • I have a Garmin GPS unit from 2009 that still works correctly. I thought by now the maps would be outdated and unusable but it still finds its way perfectly.

  • by PubJeezy ( 10299395 ) on Friday March 21, 2025 @12:11PM (#65250029)
    Is Google going to give back the money all the money that fake companies have spent on marketing? This is a fucking joke. Google should be banned from the court system. They are a recidivist offender. They've spent decades monetizing rampant criminality. I honestly don't understand how anyone can look at their track record and see Google as anything other than an ongoing criminal conspiracy.

    They've paid 2.7 BILLION in fines for 45 violations and still seem to engage in all of the business practices that they've been fined for. [source: https://violationtracker.goodj... [goodjobsfirst.org] ]
  • I wonder how many new "fake" businesses will pop up, now that Google has published thie "how to guide" in the filing?
  • You know, like MeltDown...a "new chain" you may have noticed recently. It's just Denny's, trying to remake their own image in an age of food delivery, where the customer never actually sees the restaurant.

  • Why can't the search for scammers be automated? Just crawl search/maps/etc results and apply sanity checks using the very broad and detailed databases that Google has. Seems sort of straightforward.

    Of course, maybe the answer is that when Google eliminates scammers and fake clicks, it penalizes itself and loses revenue. So, doing the right thing is bad business for Google.

    • Google doesn't actually verify anything, they'd rather just crowdsource it to bored people in exchange for "points." Their solution will probably be to crowdsource the sanity checks.

  • I like to explore places on google streetview and report pics that have obviously nothing to do with the spot. Like pics of palm trees on a mountain summit.

  • So, I live outside of the US in various countries but sometimes I have to visit.

    I visited for 1 week in April 2022 to get a new job (drug tests, mostly) and I drove a car for that week. On my 2nd to last day, I got a ticket for aggressively making a left turn in front of another car. OK OK.

    So I knew I wasnt going to be back in the USA for months so I went on Google Maps for that city and found a traffic attorney with lots of positive reviews (~30). and I called him.

    First Red Flag: He answered via his cellph

As Will Rogers would have said, "There is no such things as a free variable."

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