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to Cary Seniors Computer Club
from knowbe4
Scam of the Week: Phishing Moves to Smishing / and More News
Internet bad guys are increasingly trying to circumvent your spam
filters and instead are targeting your users directly through their
smartphone with smishing attacks, which are hard to stop.
The practice has been around for a few years, but current new scams are
mystery shopping invitations that start with a text, social engineering
the victim to send an email to the scammers, and then get roped into a
shopping fraud.
These types of smishing attacks are also more and more used for identity
theft, bank account take-overs, or pressure employees into giving out
personal or company confidential information. Fortune magazine has a new
article about this, and they lead with a video made by USA Today which
is great to send to your users as a reminder. An Australian researcher
also just published data to suggest cybercriminals are getting better
results using the phone these days.
I suggest you send employees, friends and family an email about this Scam of the Week, your welcome to copy/paste/edit:
"Bad guys are increasingly targeting you through your smartphone. They
send texts that trick you into doing something against your own best
interests. At the moment, there is a mystery shopping scam going on,
starting out with a text invitation, asking you to send an email for
more info which then gets you roped into the scam.
Always, when you get a text, remember to "Think Before You Tap", because
more and more, texts are being used for identity theft, bank account
take-overs and to pressure you into giving out personal or company
confidential information. Here is a short video made by USA Today that
shows how this works: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ffck9C4vqEM
Obviously, an end-user who was trained to spot social engineering red
flags (PDF) would think twice before falling for these scams. The link
goes to a complimentary job aid that you can print out and pin to your
wall. Your welcome to distribute this PDF to as many people as you can. https://cdn2.hubspot.net/hubfs/241394/Knowbe4-May2015-PDF/SocialEngineeringRedFlags.pdf?
Let's stay safe out there,
Warm regards,
Stu Sjouwerman
Founder and CEO
KnowBe4, Inc.