Facebook scammers wipe out photographer’s 7-year business

Alex Baker

Alex Baker is a portrait and lifestyle driven photographer based in Valencia, Spain. She works on a range of projects from commercial to fine art and has had work featured in publications such as The Daily Mail, Conde Nast Traveller and El Mundo, and has exhibited work across Europe

Photographer loses 7 years of photos to Facebook scammers

An Australian photographer is reeling after scammers hijacked his Facebook account, erasing seven years of valuable images and customer orders. This incident serves as a stark reminder of the importance of cybersecurity on social media platforms.

The victim, Doug Bazley of Caloundra, Queensland, described the attack as a catastrophic event. Scammers took control of his Facebook business page, deploying a method that is increasingly common, according to experts.

Bazley’s ordeal began when he received a seemingly legitimate message from Meta Platforms, the company behind Facebook. The message urged him to click on a link to address an issue. Little did he know this simple action would lead to the loss of his entire social media presence.

“It feels like your business has just burned down,” Bazley lamented to ABC. “I spent seven years building that and had about 16,000 followers. I love to share and post photos of our travels around Australia.”

Sadly, Bazley’s case is not an isolated incident. Tahlia Rehua, a business owner from Logan, experienced a similar attack a day after Bazley’s. Her personal and business pages were compromised, resulting in the loss of 17 years’ worth of social media content.

Warning to business owners

Bazley’s story serves as a warning to all those who rely on social media to operate their businesses. As he put it, “All I can say is people need to be very aware of what links they get and who they let in. I do all my business on there, I have lost every single contact and there was close to $3,000 worth of calendar orders prepaid, and those names and contact details have gone.”

In the face of these challenges, users are urged to take proactive steps to protect their digital assets and livelihoods. Failure to do so may invite criminals into their online domains, endangering not only their data but also their businesses. Implementing robust security controls, including multi-factor authentication, is crucial to safeguard against such cyber threats.

While I am very sympathetic to anyone who has had their accounts breached, I feel that I must also urge photographers not to rely too heavily on third-party platforms to operate their businesses. Or even to anyone who uses social media to store photographs if those memories are valuable to you.

Don’t rely on social media

It happens all too often, and it doesn’t even need to be from scammers. You literally have no power over these platforms. One moment you’re there, the next day, it could all be gone. These social networks typically have very little customer service to help you after the fact.

Please make sure you back up everything and operate your business from your own website in addition. Any ongoing customer orders and contact details should be added to a separate database and not kept on platforms such as Facebook.

I know it’s easier to say all of this, and it does require a few systems and organisation. However, the alternative is just not worth the risk.

[Via Petapixel]


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Alex Baker

Alex Baker

Alex Baker is a portrait and lifestyle driven photographer based in Valencia, Spain. She works on a range of projects from commercial to fine art and has had work featured in publications such as The Daily Mail, Conde Nast Traveller and El Mundo, and has exhibited work across Europe

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7 responses to “Facebook scammers wipe out photographer’s 7-year business”

  1. Libby Sutherland Avatar

    Anyone who relies on Fakebook as a primary business tool is an idiot, plain and simple.

  2. Farm Truck Photography Avatar
    Farm Truck Photography

    My page was unusable for a month during the busy season! I wasn’t scammed but they said it was a glitch

  3. Lisa Bradley Avatar
    Lisa Bradley

    My business account was hijacked too, Facebook support never responded. Appeal never worked, I uploaded my ID cards, my photos, and gave them my mobile numbers, I got no response from support, not until someone referred me CROWLEY_RECOVERY on Instagram who helped reactivate my account. you can check him out his an expert and very reliable!!

    Email: crowleyrecovery@gmail.com

  4. Camera operator Hong Kong Avatar

    And what about contacting FB to get back your account? Why this is not even explained?

    1. FrogLuvR Avatar

      I have heard stories aboat people losing their FB accounts, and it seems an impossible taak to get it back, since you really can not talk with a real customer support person.

  5. Alexandre Dłubała Avatar
    Alexandre Dłubała

    or just don’t click on the 1st link coming from a strange account claiming they’re Meta and using messenger 😅

  6. FrogLuvR Avatar

    I have a friend who clicked on a familar business she had dealt with before. She figured they were using Facebook to promote their business – NOT. After a month waiting for her order to arrive, she investigated and found out it was just a scam to steal her info. Amazing how scammers are getting so sneaky.