You’ve found it—the last one in stock. You click ‘buy now’ and feel a wave of relief. But what if that relief is the first step in a scam designed to steal your holiday cheer? Scammers create thousands of fake storefronts during peak shopping seasons, turning your perfect find into a costly mistake. Learning to spot the red flags is the single best skill for ensuring your money is safe and your package actually arrives.
What Are ‘Grinch Bots’ and Why Can’t You Buy a PS5?
Have you ever waited for a popular item to go on sale—like a PS5 or a hot concert ticket—only for it to be sold out the instant you click “buy”? You weren’t just unlucky or too slow. You were almost certainly beaten by a digital Grinch known as a scalper bot.
These bots are automated programs that professional scalpers use to cheat the system. While you are one person in a digital line, a scalper can deploy a bot that acts like a thousand people cutting in front of you at once. It can fill out forms and click “complete purchase” hundreds of times faster than any human ever could, buying up all the stock in seconds.
So, that frustration you feel isn’t a personal failure; you were competing in a race that was rigged from the start. Beyond bots, other scams target you directly, but a simple plan can help you turn anxiety into confidence.
The Grinch Benedict Cumberbatch: Your 3-Step Anti-Grinch Plan for Safer Shopping
You no longer have to second-guess every online purchase. Spotting the tell-tale signs of a “Grinch transaction” is a skill you can master. Use this three-step safety plan before you check out on any new site:
- Verify the Seller: Look for the padlock icon in the address bar and double-check the web address for misspellings. A fake site might use a tricky address like Walmart-deals.net instead of the real Walmart.com. If it’s not the exact official name or there’s no lock, leave immediately.
- Question the Price: Is that brand new $800 TV being sold for $99? If a deal seems unbelievable, it’s almost certainly a trap. Question any deal that pressures you to act immediately.
- Pay with Protection: Use a credit card for online shopping. A credit card uses the bank’s money, giving you a powerful ally in any dispute. A debit or cash app payment uses your money, and it’s much harder to get back.
You’re no longer just a target for scammers; you are a prepared shopper, fully in control of your digital wallet.

