Yesterday,
I published an article on how online hackers tap into internet users worst
fears to unleash terrors on potential victims. Today’s publication will focus
on tricks use by online hackers to swindle innocent victims.
THE ASSASSINATION
THREAT
Residents in Humberside were targeted
with an email claiming to be from “Muhammed Yunus Jinnah”, in which he stated
that he has been hired to assassinate the recipient. Local police say they were
called by numerous terrified people. The emails were investigated and the
recipients (who were not linked) were advised
they were a hoax. A police spokesman said: “Sadly, these types of emails could
easily scare someone who is unaware that they exist. If you receive an email
from that address, delete it.” “Scammers have really started to look into human
psychology,” says Roberts, who believes scammers use neuro-linguistics
programming to help you to imagine a scenario, which then makes it seem more
believable.
REPUTAIONAL DAMAGE
Police warned that blackmailers are
sending letters to residents in Thames Valley, threatening to expose innocent
people as paedophiles unless they bought two bitcoins from a specific account
within 72hours. The threats sent in the post, warned victims they would be
subjected to a smear campaign at their local school and letters sent to their
neighbours. The scammers boasted that their tactics had force other families to
leave their homes and, despite repeated appeals for information by the police,
they have yet to be arrested. “Scam like this makes you feel extremely
unsettled, even if you are savvy and thinking rationally,” says Cary Cooper,
professor of organisational psychology and health at Lancaster University
Management School. “We do not expect other people to behave that way and that
makes us worry about what these people are capable of.” But some of us also
have a greater propensity to be influenced by other people and suffer from low
self-confidence, so are more likely to believe such a threat would be carried
out. If you are prone to worry and perceive the situation as out of your
control; you would not know how to stop such a rumour. This kind of scam will
make you feel very insecure and threatened.
THREATENING TO
LOVED ONES
Fear for others is regularly used as
an emotional trigger. In January scammer began circulating a phishing email
that looked as though it was from a legitimate funeral home, offering
condolences on the death of “a friend” and asking them to open the attached
invitation to the funeral. The attachment, statistically more likely to be
opened by the elderly, contained malicious software. Other scammers try phone
calls where you can hear someone screaming and they tell you that your child
has been kidnapped and you need to send them money. Some threaten to shoot
their “hostage” if you disconnect the call. Social media is also used to create
more effective, personalised scams, according to John Colley, spokesperson for
cybersecurity trade association ISC”. “A scammer looking to a particular
organisation will find out the senior people are, and look at their profiles on
Facebook or on LinkedIn to try to get information that they can use. Then, when
they email, they will mention people you know or places you have worked, and ask
you to click on an attachment, which will typically infect your computer and
potentially give the scammers access to your employer’s data or network.”
According to Robert of Pen Test
Partners, threats about your friends and family are commonly used in these
scams, known as “spear phishing.” He describes the process: “With your name, a
scammer can find out your address from www.192.com
or the electoral register in the UK, find out who else lives at that address
and make judgement about whether that mighty be your husband or your children.
Then they can go to Facebook or Twitter, get a bit of information about your
children; their pictures, the Facebook group of their school, birthdays, from
your posts you have made about them and email saying: Your children, Bob and
Alice, go to a school down the road and their ages are X and Y; if you do not
pay me a £1,000, little blonde Alice is going to wind up in a shallow grave.
This scammer might not even be in the country but providing a few key bits of
information that are publicly available, he can make it seem like he is
watching your every move and that is really scary.”
“ILLEGAL
DOWNLOADING”
A message pops up on your screen which
purports to be from the police, warning that the user’s computer has been
locked because he or she has illegally downloaded porn or music. According to
Warwickshire trading standards, some people have then complied with a demand of
£100 to “unlock” their computer; handing over debit card details in the
process. In Cheshire, emails were sent from the “Cheshire Police Authority”
telling users they had breached “Article 128 of the Criminal Code of Great
Britain” and the fine was between £200 and £500. To increase the likelihood
that a particular scam will hit the right audience without having to
personalise each email, scammers are also buying up legitimate marketing email
lists, profiled to match their ideal victims. “For example, if you send an
email to a 25-year-old single male, accusing him of watching porn, you are
statistically likely to be right,” says Roberts.
HOW TO PROTECT
YOURSELF
Try not to react immediately to a
threatening email, take five or ten minutes to calm down and think about it
rationally. Where does the email come from? Why would this person be emailing
you, specifically, about this all of a sudden? Never click on an attachment
from someone you do not know, even if the email mentions someone you do know.
Consider opting out of the edited register of the electoral roll, as otherwise
your name and address can be sold to any person, organisation or company and
used for any number of purposes, including direct marketing.
Check your privacy
setting on Facebook, Twitter, and LinkedIn, consider the risks of using a very
personal photo in your profile picture on Facebook, as this is always public.
Report scams to
Action Fraud, on 0300 123 2040 or via its website. It will pass on the details
of the crime to the National Fraud Intelligence Bureau.
Culled from
Guardian
.jpg)
No comments:
Post a Comment