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Top 5 Online Scams Print E-mail
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By Robert Siciliano


#1 Nigerian Scams:

While these types of scams are generally understood to be Nigerian in nature and origin, and are in fact named after the 419 Nigerian code that made them illegal, advanced-fee scams happen right here in the good old USA by Americans presenting to offer jobs or may ask help to transfer money.

#2 Romance Scams:

If you ever hear talk like this, run far and fast: “In me sweetheart you are going to find the most passionate, loving and romantic man you have ever met. There are very few promises in life but this is one of them! ROMANCE is the key to my happiness and to my heart and soul!”

#3 Classified Ad Scams:

This story caught my eye: “An online scam targeting pet-lovers is circulating the web, and it could cost you more than a new pet. An ad posted to a local online classified website by a man who claimed he was living in Florida. He was willing to give the Labrador Retriever puppy named Dely away for the cost of shipping, which was $220.”

#4 Phishing:

Phishing continues to become more sophisticated, more effective, and more prevalent. In one example, criminal hackers waited until Pennsylvania school administrators were on vacation, then used simple money transfers to liquidate over $440,000 out of the districts accounts.

#5 Spear Phishing:

Spear phishing occurs when the scammers concentrate on a localized target, usually an individual with control over a company’s checkbook.

This insidious type of phishing occurs when a recipient clicks a link, either in the body of an email or on the spoofed website linked in the email, and a download begins.

Don’t be taken. Keep your head up and recognize when someone’s trying to take advantage of you.

Robert Siciliano personal and home security specialist to Home Security Source discussing home security and identity theft on TBS Movie and a Makeover.




Comments (3)
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1. 03-28-2011 08:11
 
The simplest phishing preventative advice is for people to check the URLs in an email before clicking and see if they match the domain of the organization being misrepresented; people are still far too trusting of the email they receive.
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2. 03-30-2011 15:26
 
I'm not clear on how example number 4 was a phishing exploit, or what people being on vacation had to do with it. Phishing is a good thing to watch for, but this doesn't do much to tell you why or, certainly, how. Fred's comment, on the other hand, is definitely news you can use.
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Mark Henricks
3. 03-30-2011 17:13
 
Thanks Mark. My interpretation of number 4 was that the phishing attack was perpetrated as coming from the school district administration soliciting money transfers from the district's constituents; with the district administrators on vacation, no one was available to answer inquiries about the email being genuine (which you would think would be a red flag in itself). Having worked for Western Union, it was always amazing to see how willing people were to transfer money under suspect conditions.
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