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Consumer & debt

Scams and unfair practices in the digital age

Juge.ca Research (Juge.ca)

Permalink: JUGE.2026.032 · Published 2026-06-19

Online scams and deceptive practices have grown sharply and can target anyone. This entry covers the protections that exist and the practical steps to take if you have been caught.

The rise of online fraud

Online scams and deceptive practices have grown sharply, moving with us as more of daily life shifts onto screens. What once arrived by mail or telephone now comes by email, text message, social media, and fake websites that can look convincingly real.

These schemes work because they exploit urgency and trust. A message warns that an account will be closed, a payment is overdue, or a prize will be lost unless you act immediately. The pressure is the point: it is designed to push people into acting before they have time to think.

It is important to understand that anyone can be targeted. Falling for a well-built scam is not a sign of carelessness, and the harm can be both financial and personal — drained accounts, stolen information, and the lasting stress of feeling deceived. Naming the problem clearly is the first step toward responding to it.

Your protections

People who are targeted by fraud are not without protection. Consumer-protection and competition laws prohibit deceptive and unfair practices, drawing a clear line between aggressive selling and conduct that crosses into deception.

Public bodies stand behind these laws. They accept reports from the people affected and pursue enforcement against those responsible. In Canada, the Competition Bureau addresses deceptive marketing practices, and in the United States, the Federal Trade Commission plays a comparable role in consumer protection.

These bodies matter for two reasons. Individually, they give a person a place to turn and a way to be heard. Collectively, the reports they receive help build a picture of emerging schemes, which supports broader enforcement that can protect others who have not yet been targeted.

What to do

If you think you have been caught by a scam, acting quickly matters. The first priority is to stop further losses: halt any additional payments, and contact your financial institution right away so it can take protective steps on your accounts.

Next, document everything. Keep the messages, emails, receipts, and any account records. A clear, organized record of what happened and when is valuable both for your financial institution and for any authority you report to.

Then report the matter to the relevant authority and keep copies of what you submit. Prompt, organized action improves the chances of a remedy and contributes to the wider effort to track and stop these schemes. Even when recovery is uncertain, reporting and good records leave you in the strongest possible position.

What this is and is not

This is research and educational material on scams, fraud and unfair commercial practices. It is general legal information, not legal advice, and it does not describe any individual's matter.

References

  1. Competition Bureau Canada — deceptive marketing practices and consumer protection.
  2. U.S. Federal Trade Commission — consumer protection and reporting fraud.

Licence & attribution

Published under Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0). Authors retain copyright. Reuse permitted with attribution.

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