![]() |
WebMail Fraud/phishing
http://blogs.pcmag.com/securitywatch...upport_tea.php
Consider this e-mail which I just received: From: WEBMAIL SUPPORT TEAM [mailto:info@webmailsupportteam.com] Sent: Monday, August 25, 2008 10:40 PM Subject: FROM WEBMAIL SUPPORT TEAM Due to concerns for the safety and integrity of your webmail account, we are bringing to your notice that we are presently upgrading our webmail account with effect From 23/08/2008-28/08/2008, we will be conducting a scheduled routine maintenance that may affect email delivery notifications on our transaction network and this maintenance might close your webmail account completely if urgent upgrading is not ensured properly by our webmail providers teams of engineers. Please be rest assured that this will not impact transactions adversely, in other to prevent and protect your webmail account from being closed down by our webmaster maintenance engineers, you are to therefore advise to please forward your SURNAME, USERNAME and PASSWORD, territory immediately for upgrading. Once we have updated your account current records will be sent to your Online Account and your service will not be interrupted and will continue working as normal. We apologize for the inconvenience this may cause you. We assure you more quality service at the end of this maintenance. Sincerely, Bhaswati Viduka Webmail Support Team NEVER EVER reply to such emails. Praxeas |
Re: WebMail Fraud/phishing
Quote:
Blessings, Falla39 |
Re: WebMail Fraud/phishing
Bump
|
Re: WebMail Fraud/phishing
It still amazes me that people get taken in by stuff like that.
Internet 101, rule 1 is: NEVER give anyone your password. Period. |
Re: WebMail Fraud/phishing
Quote:
You know some of them are incredibly tricky and I DO understand how some people, especially the elderly get taken right in. My father passed away about two years ago, and had been in banking and law. About a year AFTER he died, I received an email informing me that my father (And they had his NAME, Date of Death, BIRTHPLACE!!!! AND BIRTHDAY!!) Had several bank accounts and investment portfolios that this "Investment Firm" had been managing for him. Of course they totalled several million in value. Not only did they have HIS name and vital statistics but they had MY name as well as the names of my two brothers and my mother and were "Informing me of the investments and wanted to make arrangements to have them transferred to his estate and his rightful heirs." You know for a moment I totally bought it! It had been his way to completely leave everyone out of the loop as to his business dealings, and so something like this was no surprise at all! It wasn't until I read on about the shares in the Diamond Mining firm IN NIGERIA that the bells and sirens finally went off in my brain. But can you imagaine if I was a seventy eight year old widow who had been as many women are completely uniformed of their husbands investments and business dealings, I can see sending them every bit of information they asked for thinking that I had kind of stumbled over a pot of gold! Anyway, now I notice the scams are moving into Hong Kong and India, not just Nigeria. I still get the general scams like the Paypal thing or the Ebay thing or the Citibank thing, but the scam I mentioned above was Particualrly deceptive. It was only upon a little reflection that it became clear that someone is reading the obituaries (He had died in Palm Beach, Florida a particularly affluent town, so I guess that is why they were watching the obits.) But it had everything, Birthplace, age, date of death, survivors and their names as well as their cities of residence, so somehow they got my email and put it all together in a MOST accurate and yet deceptive way. |
All times are GMT -6. The time now is 07:00 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.5
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.