Boards Index General discussion Technical Q&A Online fraud – six signs to look out for

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  • #13011

    Be on the lookout for these six things to help protect yourself from scammers.

    1. Generic introductions such as “Dear Customer,” which indicate that the sender does not know you and should not be trusted.

    2. Alarming or urgent statements that require you to respond immediately.

    3. Requests for personal or financial information, such as user names or passwords, credit card or bank account numbers, social security numbers, date of birth, or other information that can be used to steal your identity.

    4. Misspellings and grammatical errors, including Web addresses. The Web address might look very similar to the address of a legitimate business, with a minor change. For example, instead of http://www.microsoft.com, the scammer might use http://www.micrsoft.com.

    5. The text of the link in the e-mail message is different from the Web address that you are directed to when you click the link. You can determine the actual Web address for a link by hovering over the link without clicking it. The Web address appears in a text box above the link.

    6. The “From” line in the original e-mail message to you shows a different Web address than the one that appears when you try to reply to the message.

    To read the full article – here is the linky:

    http://www.microsoft.com/protect/fraud/phishing/onlinefraud_us.mspx

    #397126

    Thanks for the advice PB, I nearly got caught out on this last week.

    I had an email from “Paypal Services Department” advising me that a dispute had been raised on my account and to click on the link to resolve the issue. As I had not used my Paypal services since last year I was very suspicious and checked by logging on to my account through the website and NOT via the link. It was indeed a fakey but the logo, typing etc were all very genuine looking only thing I saw was that it was not addressed to me personally. If I had recently used my Paypal account I would easily have fallen for this and pressed the link.

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