A survey on scam methods
A survey on scam methods
13:50 on Tuesday, October 13, 2009
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Re: A survey on scam methods
06:31 on Friday, October 16, 2009
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Re: A survey on scam methods
17:16 on Friday, October 16, 2009
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Re: A survey on scam methods
10:05 on Saturday, October 17, 2009
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Re: A survey on scam methods
22:37 on Sunday, October 18, 2009
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Re: A survey on scam methods
04:48 on Monday, October 19, 2009
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jose_luis (2369 points)
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There are "criminal" robots "reading" the web sites, searching for Email addresses of people offering things to sell, or looking for things to buy (typically for us: usedflutes.com).
I believe these robots can parse the ad to a certain extent, searching for the object in question, say "flute".
When these robots detect a candidate, they send an automated message to the poster, such as "I am interested in your flute etc."
For the time being, it seems that these robots cannot identify potential "Buyers" from "Sellers" and the message they generate can be wrong (i.e. attempting to buy something you are not selling, but you are looking for). This happened to me on my recent ad in usedflutes.com, they wanted to "buy my flute" but in fact, I was looking for an used HJ.
If the candidate replies, then the business is taken personally by the robot owner and the attempt to scam begins, as described on my post 1 on this thread.
I do not know how this works in the case of services; if someone approached P. with the argument he/she was moving to NY, this shows a knowledge of the case that is deeper than what the present simple robots could achieve, so I believe this is a human scammer that skips the robotic message and deals with these special cases directly.
Unless P. did receive the robotic message before the human-generated message and either answered it or did not pay attention to it, but the scammer had anyway already taken due note of the candidate existence.
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Re: A survey on scam methods
07:49 on Monday, October 19, 2009
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Re: A survey on scam methods
16:28 on Monday, October 19, 2009
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Re: A survey on scam methods
17:53 on Tuesday, November 17, 2009
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jose_luis (2369 points)
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Update from a personal experience:
A close friend of mine got his Email identity (username + password) stolen by a hacker. Not sure, but it was a case of phishing or perhaps bruteforce break of the yahoo site.
The same day all his friends, family and acquaintances received a message, supposedly from his part, claiming he was stuck in a foreign city without money and unable to pay for the hotel. The reason provided was he had lost his wallet. The hacker asked for a substantial amount of money on loan, to help him out (about 1,200$).
I also received it but I suspected immediately and phoned his wife.
The scam was discovered quickly but a member of his family had already taken the money from the bank and was ready to send it to the scammer. It was a very close escape.
Lessons to learn:
- Nobody is immune to well made phishing techniques.
- Even if you were, identities are stolen, sometimes by the tens of thousands, through strong attacks to popular servers as Yahoo, Google and others.
For these reasons, I think it would be safer:
- Do not store old mail messages on those servers, as these messages could eventually provide a hacker with valuable information about your friends and family. Configure the server to automatically delete all messages once downloaded. Keep them on your PC, if you want or need to, but not on the server.
- Never use the address books of those sites, for the same reason above
- Never repeat your passwords for different services (for example for Email and for bank accounts), because if you are cloned and a hacker gets one of your passwords, you risk your whole (virtual) life. Virtual yes, but all your money and putthe money of your relatives and friends on high risk, too.
- If you can, (though this is difficult), avoid hosting your Email on servers that provide Webmail service (or disable this service if possible), as a hacker can send messages easily from that service if he/she obtains your identity.
- And be lucky, Internet is getting increasingly hostile and a cave of techno-criminals.
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Re: A survey on scam methods
08:41 on Sunday, November 29, 2009
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Re: A survey on scam methods
10:25 on Sunday, November 29, 2009
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