- Consumer Sentinel Network
- The President's Identity Theft Task Force
- FTC Survey
- 2012 Javelin Strategy & Research Report
- Immigration Fraud
- It Can Happen to Anyone
- A Big Problem
- Terrorism and Identity Theft
- What Do Identity Thieves Do?
- Phishing-Go Phish
- Who Do You Trust?
- How Do You Know That You Have Been a Victim of Phishing?
- What You Can Do to Prevent Identity Theft
Phishing—Go Phish
You might remember the commercials by Citibank about its identity theft protections in which the voice of a young woman describing the bustier she bought with her credit card comes out of the body of an overweight, slovenly man. The ads made their point, but unfortunately so did the identity thieves who targeted Citibank and other companies through a tactic known as “phishing,” in which they sent e-mails to unsuspecting consumers telling them that they needed to click on a hyperlink to update their information with the companies. When unsuspecting victims clicked on the hyperlink, they came to a Web site that looked like the real McCoy, or Citibank for that matter, but it was a phony. When the consumer entered his or her personal information, such as Social Security number or a credit card number, the identity thief had all he or she needed to either use the information to steal the identity of the victim or sell the information to other thieves. In the last two months of 2003, Citibank issued 14 alerts to its customers warning them of this dangerous scam.
The term “phishing” goes back to the early days of America Online (AOL) when it charged its customers an hourly rate. Young Internet users with an addiction to their computers, not very much cash, and a bit of larceny in their hearts sent e-mails or instant messages through which they purported to be AOL customer service agents. In these phony e-mails under those false pretenses, they would ask for the unwary victim’s passwords in order to stay online on someone else’s dime. After a while, this phony fishing expedition, fishing for information, came to be known as “phishing.”
Phishing with a Pal
PayPal is a company with which anyone who has ever bought something on eBay is familiar. PayPal is an online payment service, owned by eBay, used to securely transfer money electronically. Through the popularity of eBay’s online auction site, PayPal has gathered 40 million customers who use its services to make sure that the exchange of funds for auctioned items is done safely and securely. But for many people, that safety and security are an illusion. Through phishing, a con man sets up a Web site that imitates a legitimate Web site, such as PayPal, but whose sole purpose is to obtain sensitive personal financial information that can be used to facilitate identity theft. With the computer and software technology so readily available to pull off such a crime, the skill and artistry of the forgers of yesterday are not needed by the identity-stealing phishers of today.
Through phony e-mails that looked as though they were from PayPal, the identity thieves contacted retailers that used PayPal’s services and requested confirmation of their passwords and other account information. According to PayPal, the passwords requested provided the criminals with access to sales information, but fortunately the personal financial information of their customers is stored on separate secure computer servers that are inaccessible to merchants or others that use PayPal’s services. That is the good news. The bad news is that, armed with customers’ names and other information about their previous purchases obtained through this scam, the con men were in a position to contact the customers directly and trick the unwary customers into revealing personal financial information that opened the door to identity theft. In the past, con men have sent e-mails purporting to be from PayPal, telling the customers that their accounts would be put on a restricted status until they completed a credit card confirmation that could be found on the PayPal site to which the e-mail directed the consumer. Unfortunately, the Web site to which the consumers were directed was a phony site used by the criminals to phish for victims. Previously, criminals would just randomly send out millions of e-mailmessages, hoping to snag a few unwary victims. However, armed with personal account information surreptitiously obtained from PayPal using merchants, the phony e-mails would appear more legitimate and thus they were more likely to take in more victims.
Former Good Advice
Smug consumers used to be able to identify a phishing expedition by merely looking at the Web browser’s address window to determine whether the e-mail purporting to be from some company with which they generally dealt was legitimate. If the sender’s e-mail address began with an unusual number configuration or had random letters, it indicated that it was phony. The e-mail addresses of legitimate companies are usually simple and direct. Unfortunately, this is no longer the case. Now computer-savvy identity thieves are able to mimic the legitimate e-mail addresses of legitimate companies.
Two Things to Look For
When identity thieves mimic a legitimate company’s e-mail address using the latest technology, there will be no SSL padlock icon in the lower corner of your browser. SSL is the abbreviation for Secure Sockets Layer, an Internet term for a protocol for transmitting documents over the Internet in an encrypted and secure fashion. In addition, when you type a different URL (the abbreviation for Uniform Resource Locator, the address of material found on the World Wide Web) into what appears to be the address bar, the browser’s title will not change from the phony “welcome message.”
More Good Advice
Don’t fall for the bait. It takes a few moments longer, but if you are in any way inclined to respond to an e-mail that could be phishing to send you to a phony Web site, do not click on the hyperlink in the e-mail that purports to send you to the company’s Web site. Rather, type in what you know to be the proper Web site address for the company with which you are dealing.
As more people become aware of the dangers of phishing, identity thieves are adapting their tactics to now using Internet search engines, such as Google and Bing, to lure people into clicking on links that people think will send them to a legitimate Web site, but that instead will download dangerous malware to their computer that can steal all the information on their computer and make them a victim of identity theft. Identity thieves have been able to infiltrate search engines by adapting their phony Web sites that contain the dangerous links to receive more traffic. People are less aware of this danger and are less skeptical of search-engine results than they are of e-mails with phony phishing links.