Intentionally failed installation lures users into calling ‘support’ line,
which drags them into multimillion pound scam. “Microsoft
virus phone call” scammers are tricking people into paying bogus support fees
by setting up fake websites offering antivirus downloads designed to fail on
installation. The failed installation tells the user to call a phone number which
connects them to the scammers, who then talk the customer through a process
that makes it seem like their PC has a virus infection. The scammers “install”
software and charge annual fees, part of an ongoing process that has cost
victims millions around the world.
The new version of
the scam was discovered by the security company Malwarebytes, which documents
it in a new blog post. It has reported a number of websites and is telling
LogMeIn, a legitimate remote support tool that is favoured by the scammers, of
codes they use so they can be blocked. “The online tech support industry is
facing a big problem right now,” Jérome Segura of Malwarebytes told the
Guardian. “There are too many fraudulent companies being overly aggressive in
reaching out to people, whether it is with cold calls, online adverts or fake
pop-ups. “And then in between you have companies that perhaps started an honest
business but over time have gone shady because they realised how easy it was to
make an enormous amount of money using deceptive practices. That is bad news
for consumers who are walking a minefield when looking for support.”
The modus operandi
of the tech support scammers, almost all of whom operate out of Kolkata in
India, is to use phone directories and cold-call people telling them they are
“from Microsoft” or “from Microsoft Windows” and that their PC has been
reported as transmitting viruses. They then tell people to open a program on
their machine which appears, to the uninitiated user, to be warning of errors
on their system, but is in fact indicative of normal operation. The scammers
then tell alarmed customers they can “fix” the problem for a price which can
range to hundreds of pounds. They use LogMeIn or another remote support company
to gain remote access to the system, and “fix” the nonexistent problem.
The Guardian exposed in
July 2010 how the
“support scams” were being run from call centres in India. Subsequently the
Guardian obtained details of three individuals, two based in India and one in
Canada, who were believed to be the ringleaders of one of the scams, using an
online payment company to route their payments from victims. The details were
passed to police.
In October 2012
the US Federal Trade Commission froze the
US bank accounts and assets of a number of “tech support” companies in India,
alleging that tens of thousands of Americans have been tricked into paying for
unneeded “support”. Among those who had accounts frozen was a company called
Pecon Support, now inactive. However, that has not stopped gangs in India from
making cold calls and scamming victims, often older people who do not realise
that Microsoft does not make such calls. “We know that there are multiple
organisations in India as well as the US but getting an exact picture of how
they relate to each other is not easy,” Segura told the Guardian. “This is in
part due to the fact that these groups use multiple identities, websites and
hundreds of different phone numbers. This particular antivirus rip off scam was
located in India, but unlike so many others the technicians showed a better
command of the English language, in fact sounding quite British. These are the
kind of little details that we, as investigators, pick upon because they can
help us to identify various accents and put individuals on a map, because we
know accents vary per region in India.”
He said that one
technician told him that they were receiving an average of 3,000 calls a day.
“If we keep in mind the price for support services typically ranges between two
to four hundred dollars, we are talking about a multimillion dollar industry
that crooks are exploiting every single day,” Segura said.
Culled from Guardian
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3 comments:
This is serious. Gosh!!!
This is serious. Users of internet should be conscious of all these evil. Thanks for the information814
Gosh!!!!
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