Fake Google & Yelp Listings: How Scammers Hijack Local Businesses
If you searched for a garage door repair company in Fremont and called a number you found online, you may not have reached the business you thought you were calling. A growing consumer-protection problem involves scammers who copy a real local company's name, address, and reviews, then swap in their own phone number. We know this firsthand: a clone site copied our business, Austin's Affordable Garage Doors, owned by Austin Little here in Fremont. This guide explains how the fake Google listing and hijacked Yelp listing scam works so you can protect yourself.
How a Real Business Gets Hijacked
The scam follows a predictable playbook. Bad actors find an established, well-reviewed local business and copy the parts that build instant trust: the company name, the street address, sometimes even the customer reviews. Then they make one critical change — they substitute their own phone number so the calls (and the money) flow to them instead of the real owner.
In our case, a clone website, austinsaffordablegaragedoors.com, was registered on September 17, 2025, through a registrar called WebNic and is hosted on infrastructure (HosterPK) using Pakistan-based nameservers, with the registrant's identity hidden behind privacy redaction. The clone copied our real business name and our real address (40735 Creston St, Fremont CA 94538) but listed a different phone copycat number — which public records indicate is a VoIP line (associated with carriers Bandwidth.com and Onvoy) rather than a local landline. Tellingly, the clone even still leaks our real number, (510) 694-9699, in one of its links, showing the content was lifted directly from our own site.
Why Scammers Love Fake Listings
A fake Google listing or hijacked profile is attractive to scammers for a few reasons:
- Instant credibility. Copying a real, established name and address borrows trust the scammer never earned.
- Cheap, disposable phone numbers. VoIP lines can be set up in minutes and abandoned just as fast, making them hard to trace back to a real person.
- Hard-to-reach hosting. Overseas hosting and privacy-redacted registrations make takedowns slower and accountability harder.
- Fake social proof. Cloned or invented reviews and testimonials make the operation look legitimate at a glance.
On the clone, fake testimonials appeared under names like "Josh Keeton" (also rendered "Josh Keaton") listed as a "Director," along with "David Martinez" and "Michael Turner." These are the kinds of generic, unverifiable names that often signal manufactured reviews rather than real customers.
The Broader "Scam Mill" Pattern
This is not an isolated problem in the garage door industry. According to public listings and reports, a Texas operation called "Neighborhood Garage Door Service, Inc." (with locations reported in Carrollton, Houston, and El Paso) has accumulated heavy Better Business Bureau complaints alleging overcharging and the targeting of seniors and women, and refusing to honor warranties. A broader scheme reported as "Garage Door Services of Texas / GDS" allegedly ran more than 1,000 domains and fake Google Maps listings that funneled callers to a central call center, which then dispatched gig workers. This "scam mill" model is designed to shut down and reopen under new names whenever complaints mount — which is exactly why fake listings keep reappearing.
How to Spot and Avoid a Fake Listing
You can usually protect yourself with a few quick checks before you call or pay anyone:
- Verify the phone number on multiple sources. Cross-check the number on the official Yelp page, Nextdoor, and the company's long-standing website. If one listing shows a different number than the others, be cautious.
- Look up the official Yelp listing directly. Our verified Yelp page is yelp.com/biz/austins-affordable-garage-door-fremont-3.
- Watch for VoIP-only contact. A legitimate local company usually has a stable, long-used local number — not a freshly created VoIP line.
- Be skeptical of generic testimonials. Vague "Director" or stock-sounding names with no verifiable history are a red flag.
- Check the website's age and domain details. A brand-new domain claiming to be a long-established local business is worth a second look.
- Get the address and number in writing. Before any work or payment, confirm who you are actually dealing with.
What to Do If You Think You've Been Targeted
If you believe you contacted a fake or hijacked listing, you can report a fraudulent Google Business Profile through Google, flag a fake page on Yelp, and file a complaint with the BBB and the California Attorney General's office. Keeping screenshots, call logs, and receipts helps.
Our Real Contact Information
For your safety, here is the truth about our business: Austin's Affordable Garage Doors is owned by Austin Little in Fremont, California. Our only real phone number is (510) 694-9699. We are not affiliated with a copycat number, the clone website, or anyone else using our name. If a listing for our company shows any other number, please verify with us directly before proceeding.
This article provides general consumer and business information about fake online listings and is not formal legal advice. If you have specific concerns about fraud or your legal rights, consult a qualified attorney.
Talk to the Real Austin's Affordable Garage Doors
Locally owned by Austin Little in Fremont, CA. Our only number is (510) 694-9699. Senior & military discounts.
Call (510) 694-9699