Cybercriminals are running a large-scale email scam that falsely claims cloud storage subscriptions have failed. For several months, people across different countries have been receiving repeated messages warning that their photos, files, and entire accounts will soon be restricted or erased due to an alleged payment issue. The volume of these emails has increased sharply, with many users receiving several versions of the same scam in a single day, all tied to the same operation.
Although the wording of each email differs, the underlying tactic remains the same. The messages pressure recipients to act immediately by claiming that a billing problem or storage limit must be fixed right away to avoid losing access to personal data. These emails are sent from unrelated and randomly created domains rather than official service addresses, a common sign of phishing activity.
The subject lines are crafted to trigger panic and curiosity. Many include personal names, email addresses, reference numbers, or specific future dates to appear genuine. The messages state that a renewal attempt failed or a payment method expired, warning that backups may stop working and that photos, videos, documents, and device data could disappear if the issue is not resolved. Fake account numbers, subscription details, and expiry dates are used to strengthen the illusion of legitimacy.
Every email in this campaign contains a link. While the first web address may appear to belong to a well-known cloud hosting platform, it only acts as a temporary relay. Clicking it silently redirects the user to fraudulent websites hosted on changing domains. These pages imitate real cloud dashboards and display cloud-related branding to gain trust. They falsely claim that storage is full and that syncing of photos, contacts, files, and backups has stopped, warning that data will be lost without immediate action.
After clicking forward, users are shown a fake scan that always reports that services such as photo storage, drive space, and email are full. Victims are then offered a short-term discount, presented as a loyalty upgrade with a large price reduction. Instead of leading to a real cloud provider, the buttons redirect users to unrelated sales pages advertising VPNs, obscure security tools, and other subscription products. The final step leads to payment forms designed to collect card details and generate profit for the scammers through affiliate schemes.
Many recipients mistakenly believe these offers will fix a real storage problem and end up paying for unnecessary products. These emails and websites are not official notifications. Real cloud companies do not solve billing problems through storage scans or third-party product promotions. When payments fail, legitimate providers usually restrict extra storage first and provide a grace period before any data removal.
Users should delete such emails without opening links and avoid purchasing anything promoted through them. Any concerns about storage or billing should be checked directly through the official website or app of the cloud service provider.