An extortion scam is a type of scam where someone threatens, coerces, or blackmails the victim into providing a form of payment or service.

How Does it Work?

During an email extortion scam, the scammer will send out extortion emails to a bulk amount of individuals. The email threatens to make embarrassing information public unless the victim pays up. Payment is made via Bitcoin, allowing scammers to easily collect the money anonymously. Making the extortion believable is that the email may include a password that individual may have used to log into a site, making victims believe they’ve been hacked and need to pay the extortion demand.

The citation of a password in the message opening is intended to establish the extortioner's credibility with the message recipient, and to motivate the recipient to comply with the extortion request. The cited password may be an old, valid password that was disclosed as the result of a prior compromise of an unrelated account or service, such as LinkedIn, Yahoo, Tumblr, MySpace and others.  It is believed that the attackers are leveraging older compromised credential lists to more narrowly target recipients of this campaign.

Extortion Email Scams

Messages from these campaigns are identified by the following distinct features:

If You Have Received An Extortion Email Message