How Not to Get Hooked by a
'Phishing' Scam
Internet
scammers casting about for people's financial information have a new
way to lure unsuspecting victims: They go "phishing."
Phishing, also called
"carding," is a high-tech scam that uses spam to deceive consumers
into disclosing their credit card numbers, bank account information,
Social Security numbers, passwords, and other sensitive
information.
According to the Federal
Trade Commission (FTC), the emails pretend to be from businesses the
potential victims deal with - for example, their Internet service
provider (ISP), online payment service or bank. The fraudsters tell
recipients that they need to "update" or "validate" their billing
information to keep their accounts active, and direct them to a
"look-alike" Web site of the legitimate business, further tricking
consumers into thinking they are responding to a bona fide request.
Unknowingly, consumers submit their financial information - not to
the businesses - but the scammers, who use it to order goods and
services and obtain credit.
To avoid getting caught
by one of these scams, the FTC, the nation's consumer protection
agency, offers this guidance:
- If you get an email
that warns you, with little or no notice, that an account of yours
will be shut down unless you reconfirm your billing information,
do not reply or click on the link in the email. Instead, contact
the company cited in the email using a telephone number or Web
site address you know to be genuine.
- Avoid emailing
personal and financial information. Before submitting financial
information through a Web site, look for the "lock" icon on the
browser's status bar. It signals that your information is secure
during transmission.
- Review credit card
and bank account statements as soon as you receive them to
determine whether there are any unauthorized charges. If your
statement is late by more than a couple of days, call your credit
card company or bank to confirm your billing address and account
balances.
- Report suspicious
activity to the FTC. Send the actual spam to uce@ftc.gov. If you believe you've
been scammed, file your complaint at http://www.ftc.gov/, and then visit
the FTC's Identity Theft Web site (www.ftc.gov/idtheft) to
learn how to minimize your risk of damage from identity
theft.
- Visit www.ftc.gov/spam to learn other
ways to avoid email scams and deal with deceptive spam. The
Federal Trade Commission works for the consumer to prevent
fraudulent, deceptive, and unfair business practices in the
marketplace and to provide information to help consumers spot,
stop, and avoid them. To file a complaint or to get free
information on consumer issues, visit www.ftc.gov or call
toll-free, 1-877-FTC-HELP (1-877-382-4357); TTY: 1-866-653-4261.
The FTC enters Internet, telemarketing, identity theft, and other
fraud-related complaints into Consumer Sentinel, a secure online
database available to hundreds of civil and criminal law
enforcement agencies in the U.S. and abroad.
[connectors/NewsLetter/meetingnotes_files/complaint.htm]
July
2003 |