No place is 100% safe 24/7.
Tips edited from:
14 Tips for Safe Online Shopping
We all know Amazon.com carries
everything under the sun; likewise, just about every major retail outlet has an online store, from Target to Best Buy to Home Depot. Beware of misspellings or sites using a different top-level domain (.net instead of .com, for example)—those are the oldest tricks in the book.
Never buy anything online using your credit card from a site that doesn't have SSL (secure sockets layer) encryption installed—at the very least. You'll know if the site has SSL because the URL for the site will start with HTTP
S—instead of just HTTP.
When possible, default to giving up as little personal data as possible. Major sites
get breached all the time.
Change your passwords often and utilize uncrackable passwords.
View electronic statements for your credit card, debit card, and checking accounts. Look for any fraudulent charges, even originating from payment sites like
PayPal and
Venmo.
You should definitely only buy online with a credit card. If your debit card is compromised, scammers have direct access to your bank funds.
If you see something wrong, pick up the phone to address the matter quickly.
You need to protect against
malware with regular updates to your
antivirus program.
You should probably also use a
virtual private network (VPN).
If you're wary of a site, perform your due diligence.
Don't be embarrassed if you get taken for a ride while online shopping. Instead, get very, very
mad. Complain to the seller. If you don't get satisfaction, report it to the
Federal Trade Commission, your
state's attorney general, even the
FBI. That's probably going to work best if you buy in the US, rather than with foreign sites