Paul Whybrow
Full Member
This article draws attention to a fraudulent activity that is profoundly disturbing:
Money Laundering Via Author Impersonation on Amazon? — Krebs on Security
It's not something that most writers would even imagine could be going on, by stealing their identity. Just think what it could do to your credit rating alone, while you disputed tax bills for earnings that were in your name only, and which you were wholly ignorant of!
What astounds me about the entire story, is that it's so obviously a fraudulent scheme. Don't Amazon run security checks on books of gobbledegook priced at hundreds of dollars? Then, there's the issue of bogus helpline numbers, ostensibly for Amazon, that further mine the personal information of bewildered customers.
Amazon is so huge, like a lumbering Brontosaurus, that it's not surprising that it offers a home to harmful parasites
Not only are scammers making money from authors' identities via Createspace, they're also plagiarising work by stealing portions of different textbooks and lumping them together:
Scammers Are Using Createspace to Spam Amazon With Pirated Textbooks | The Digital Reader
Publishing is a jungle: let's be careful out there!