MARKETWATCH WARNS ON NEW ONLINE PHISHING SCAMS
8 May 2009
Take care on social networking sites
Many online gamblers use social networking websites, and
a cautionary article this week in Marketwatch will
therefore be of interest.
Titled "Not So
Friendly" the article warns that fraudsters gain access
to the names of your friends on social networking sites,
like MySpace.com, and invite you to click on a hyperlink
to view a funny video. Victims figure they know the
sender, so they click to watch. Then their screen
freezes, and they get a message telling them their video
player needs upgrading.
Click to upgrade,
however, and you have just accepted a Trojan horse,
which follows your movements online. Through it,
scammers can capture personal information, including
credit card numbers, social security numbers and even
online check photographs when you conduct business
online.
"Malware and Trojans [are] distributed on
a massive scale," one expert says.
Other illegal
banking activities also are increasing.
Identity
theft increased 22 percent to nearly 10 million victims
in 2008, according to Javelin Strategy. And the Federal
Trade Commission clocked 313 982 identity-theft
complaints, up from 215 000 in 2003.
More than 5
million U.S. consumers lost money to "phishing" attacks
in the year ending September 2008, a 40 percent increase
over the number of victims a year earlier, according to
the respected research firm Gartner Inc.
On
average, 44 percent of a community bank's check fraud
losses could be attributed to organised crime rings, the
American Bankers Association reported.
Marketwatch offers the following precautionary tips:
* Be sceptical of messages urging you to upgrade
programs or download anything, even if you think you
know the person.
* Upgrade antivirus software,
personal firewalls and browsers. Let your operating
system accept automatic patches with updates.
*
Don't respond to work-at-home ads or promises of money
or returns that sound too good to be true.
* Be
wary of providing personal information to people you
don't know.
* In the US - check credit reports
annually for free at AnnualCreditReport.com.
*
Before cashing checks and money orders from people you
don't know, verify funds exist in the account at the
issuing financial institution.
* Carefully and
routinely monitor bank and investment statements for
evidence of fraud, and immediately report anything
suspicious.
* Don't click on email hyperlinks.
* Change passwords often.
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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