This article is from Trend Micro.
This week we’ve found a large number of scams that you need to watch out for, including ones relating to Green Dot, Walmart, Netflix, Venus Business Communications, Gmail, and MORE. Would you have been able to spot all the scams?
Phishing is one of the most commonly used tactics by scammers. Conventionally, while impersonating famous brands, they send out fake text messages and emails containing phishing links and try to entice you into opening them with various lies.
In such phishing schemes, the links will take you to fake log-in pages that appear to belong to various brands. These pages require you to submit log-in credentials to download a software update, change account settings, or whatever other tasks the scammers have asked you to complete. Below is an example:
We’ve reported on fake security alerts from famous banks like Citibank or Wells Fargo several times before, and this week we detected a wave of phishing attempts impersonating Green Dot Corporation, a prepaid card issuer in the United States:
Why do scammers do this? To record the sensitive information you enter and use it to hack into your account or even commit other cybercrimes such as identity theft. Don’t get scammed!
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If you get an email that says you have messages pending and asks you to validate your email address before you can read them, think twice before doing anything!
Scammers impersonate email providers and send out fake pending message notifications, prompting you to click on the embedded button that takes you to a copycat email log-in page belonging to services like Gmail or Webmail:
The page is a phishing site. As explained, scammers can gain access to your email account with
the credentials you submit here. Don’t fall for it!
These phishing links also lead to online survey pages that state you can claim a gift by filling out
an online questionnaire. After you complete the questionnaire, you are prompted to enter
credit card details before your “gift” can be delivered. Here are some examples:
Walmart has always been one of the scammers’ favorite brands to pose as. Promising you a
Walmart gift card or other reward, scammers lure you into claiming the gift via the attached
phishing link:
If you take the bait and click “Claim Now,” you will be taken to this Walmart online survey page featuring a $500 Walmart gift card. You could end up exposing your credit card information — and of course, there’s no gift card or any other reward. Be careful!
We saw a similar template used in another survey scam — posing as the Internet service provider Venus Business Communications, scammers lure you into clicking on the scam link using a free iPad as a hook:
As mentioned, you will need to complete an online survey to get the gift. If you enter any personal information, the scammers will record it all! Don’t get scammed!
Back in January this year we reported on Netflix SMS phishing scams, and now they are reoccurring. Falsely claiming that you have to update your account status, scammers prompt you to click on the attached phishing link:
Alert : The Netflix membership payment has been failed and account status is Restricted <URL> [Attachment(s) removed]
The link will take you to this Netflix survey page that says you can win a free Netflix subscription for a year.
Sounds tempting? Don’t fall for it, and please never share your credit card information or other personal data online if you’re not 100% sure of a website’s legitimacy.
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