Archive for the ‘Keyloggers’ Category


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Another LinkedIn phishing scam

Same old same old, but still plenty of ignorant, gullible, inexperienced, careless or thoughtless suckers who’ll fall for it, even though it’s blindingly obvious.

LinkedIn phishing scam

Apple ID Phishing Scam

Typical phishing scam email. All the usual tell-tale signs that rely on the recipient’s ignorance, inexperience, carelessness or gullibility.

Apply ID phishing scam

Facebook Lottery Phishing Scam

Yep, it’s another really clumsy Facebook scam to steal your identity, bank account, etc. Lots of bad English, spelling errors and other obvious stuff — including no email address for the recipient (otherwise it might not match your Facebook email address, right?)

Facebook Lottery phishing scam

Three new phishing scams

Don’t fall for these obvious scams

Three new versions of old identity-theft phishing scams are doing the rounds…

Telstra/BigPond phishing scam

ASB bank phishing scam

LinkedIn phishing scam

Latest round of phishing scams

This latest round of phishing scams target Facebook, Twitter and a range of other membership accounts online claiming that your password or other access details have been changed from 1 November, so you need to either get hold of your new password, etc, or enter new ones.

Yeah… right!

Incredibly, thousands of dummies will fall for this scam, as they always do. Just take a look at this info graphic I received today. Not even addressed to one of my Facebook account-linked email addresses… and includes copies to several unrelated people.

The attachment is a standard phishing scam form asking for all your account info so they can hijack your account and steal your identity.

If you get scammed by this one, you deserve it.

Facebook phishing scam email

Tax Scams: IRS and ATO

How can you tell they’re both scams? Easy — I have over 160 sites, many with .au domain names because I live in Melbourne, Australia, the World’s Most Liveable City (yep… back in #1 spot again for 2011).

That means I get BOTH versions of this scam, to multiple addresses, NONE of which either the IRS (USA) or ATO (Australia) have on file. Plus one of the versions below actually posts multiple email addresses in the address field (a real bozo scammer).

If you receive any version of this email scam message, do NOT open the attachment.

ATO scam 01This is the Australian version of the scam message

IRS scam 01

This is the US version.

YouTube Phishing Scam

More of the same, except this time is claims to be from YouTube.

YouTube Phishing Scam

Twitter Phishing Scam

Standard-issue phishing scam email claiming to be from Twitter.

Objective: to steal your identity and your Twitter account, and the IDs of your followers.

Clumsy and inept, but still people fall for these really easy-to-detect scams in droves.

Mobile phone malware on a steep rise!

The rise of mobile malware has been a top story of 2011. From June 2010-January 2011, malware for the Android operating system rose by 400%! Malware creators follow the crowds, and mobile web browsing is huge. Some experts predict the amount of mobile malware to double this year.

This infographic from Bullguard does an excellent job of explaining what mobile malware is, its history and what you can do to protect yourself from it. The bottom line is this… if you’re using a mobile device, then you absolutely should have a mobile security suite installed.

Mobile Malware on the riseThis is a short excerpt only. Click here to view the entire image.

New PayPal phishing scam email

Do NOT click on the attachment!

This is just another variant on the classic PayPal phishing scam designed to get you to either enter your account access info into a fake PayPal form or page, or to take over your computer by adding it to a botnet. Check out the tell-tale signs:

Fake PayPal email

The link to ppal.com reveals the truth…

Fake PayPal link

Plenty of clues here: Copyright to an unrelated company; domain name for sale; vague search results and a standard “link farm” page typical of those used by domain resellers and squatters who snap up expired domain names in the hope of holding the neglectful owners to ransom. NONE of this related to PayPal in any way.

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