Click
Here
for more articles |
|
|
Cyber
Crooks Go "Phishing" |
by:
Jim
Edwards |
©
Jim Edwards - All Rights reserved
http://www.thenetreporter.com
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
"Phishing," the latest craze among online
evil-doers, has
nothing to do with sitting at the end of
a dock on a sunny
afternoon dangling a worm to entice hungry
catfish.
But, if you take their bait, this new breed
of online con
artist will hook you, reel you in, and take
you for every
dollar you have... or worse.
"Phishing" describes a combination of techniques
used by
cyber crooks to bait people into giving
up sensitive
personal data such as credit card numbers,
social security
numbers, bank account numbers, dates of
birth and more.
Their techniques work so well that, according
to
FraudWatchInternational.com, "phishing"
rates as the
fastest growing scam on the Internet.
Here's the basic pattern for a "phishing"
scam...
You receive a very official email that appears
to originate
from a legitimate source, such as a bank,
eBay, PayPal,
a major retailer, or some other well known
entity.
In the email it tells you that something
bad is about to
happen unless you act quickly.
Typically it tells you that your account
is about to get
closed, that someone appears to have stolen
your identity,
or even that someone opened a fraudulent
account using your
name.
In order to help straighten everything out,
you need to
click a link in the email and provide some
basic account
information so they can verify your identity
and then give
you additional details so you can help get
everything
cleared up.
Once you give up your information... it's
all over but the
crying!
After getting your information, these cyber-bandits
can
empty your bank accounts, deplete your PayPal
accounts, run
up your credit card balances, open new credit
accounts,
assume your identity and much worse.
An especially disturbing new variation of
this scam
specifically targets online business owners
and affiliate
marketers.
In this con, the scammer's email informs
you that they've
just sent $1,219.43 (or a similar big but
believable
amount) in affiliate commissions to you
via PayPal.
They need you to log into your PayPal account
to verify
receipt of the money and then email them
back to confirm
you got it.
Since you're so excited at the possibility
of an unexpected
pay day, you click the link to go to PayPal,
log in, and
BANG! They have your PayPal login information
and can empty
your account.
This new "phishing" style scam works extremely
well for 2
basic reasons.
First, by exploiting your sense of urgency
created by fear
or greed, crooks get you to click the link
and give them
your information without thinking.
Second, the scammers use a variety of cloaking
and spoofing
techniques to make their emails and websites
appear totally
legitimate, making it extremely hard to
spot a fake website,
especially when they've first whipped you
into an emotional
frenzy.
The good news, however, is that you can
protect yourself
relatively easily against this type of cyber-crime
with
basic software and common sense.
Most of these scams get delivered to you
via Spam
(unsolicited email), so a good spam blocker
will cut down
on many of them even making it to your inbox.
If you receive an email that looks legitimate
and you want
to respond, Stop - Wait - Think!
Verify all phone numbers with a physical
phone book or
online phone directory like www.Verizon.com
or
www.ATT.com/directory/ before calling.
Look for spelling and grammatical errors
that make it look
like someone who doesn't speak English or
your native
language very well wrote it.
Never click the link provided in the email,
but go directly
to the website by typing in the main address
of the site
yourself (example: www.paypal.com or www.ebay.com).
Forward the email to the main email address
of the website
(example: support@paypal.com) or call the
customer service
number on the main website you typed in
yourself and ask if
it is in fact legitimate.
Above all remember this:
Your bank, credit card company, PayPal,
eBay and anyone
else you deal with online already knows
your account
number, username, password or any other
account specific
information.
They don't need to email you for ANY reason
to ask you to
confirm your information -- so NEVER respond
to email
requests for your account or personal details.
About the author:
Jim Edwards is a syndicated newspaper columnist
and the
co-author of an amazing new ebook that will
teach you how
to use fr-e articles to quickly drive thousands
of targeted
visitors to your website or affiliate links...
Simple "Traffic Machine" brings Thousands
of NEW visitors to
your website for weeks, even months... without
spending a
dime on advertising! ==> "Turn
Words Into
Traffic"
Circulated by Bandoni
Media
|
|