Tag Archive for: Madison

Madison County Sheriff’s Office warns of scam circulating in county


MADISON, Fla. (WTXL) — The Madison County Sheriff’s Office warned of a scam scheme circulating in the county on Monday.

According to the Madison County Sheriff’s Office’s Facebook page, “The scammer identifies himself/herself as an employee with Norton Computer Security. The scammer calls and informs the intended victim that they owe the victim a refund. They ask for permission to log into the victims’ personal banking account so the refund can be transferred. While accessing the victim’s account, the scammer informs the victim that they made a “mistake” and accidentally deposited too much money in the victim’s account. The scammer then requests the victim to wire the overpayment they deposited minus the owed refund back to them.

“The scammer will provide the victim with the name of the bank, person, and account number required to return the overpayment. In this scam, the scammer will move the “accidental overpayment money” from another account owned by the victim to the account identified for refund. It will appear to be a legitimate transfer when the victim is reviewing the account, however it is the victim’s money transferred from another compromised account. If the victim follows the instructions of the scammer, the victim will lose their own money.”

The sheriff’s office advised its citizens to:

  • Never allow any unknown person to access your 

    computer / device either in-person or remotely 

  • Never provide passwords or account information 
  • Never provide personal information to individuals who are 

    not known 

  • Call the company/business yourself to verify 
  • Review all accounts routinely for any suspicious 

    or unauthorized account activity 

The sheriff’s office notes if you believe you have been a victim of this or any other scam, call the Madison County Sheriff’s Office at 850-973-4001 ext. 1.

Source…

Madison senior loses nearly $1,000 in tech scam, police say | 97 Seven Country WGLR – The Tri-States Best Variety of Country


MADISON, Wis. — A senior citizen lost nearly $1,000 last month after falling for a phone scam, according to a release by the Madison Police Department.

The 67-year-old woman told police a message popped up on her husband’s computer last month about a tech support issue. The woman said she wrote a check for $999 to a tech company and late realized she had been scammed.

The woman notified police after scammers called her home last week trying to get her to send $3,000 for computer security software.

Madison police are reminding the public that tech scammers want people to believe there is something wrong with their computer, like a virus. These scammers then try to get people to pay for services they do not need to fix a problem that does not exist.

Scammers will often ask people to put money on a gift card or prepaid card or use a money transfer app since these payments can be hard to reverse.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Source…

Smashing Security #165: Cheapfakes, deepfakes, and Ashley Madison

Wi-Fi hopping malware, the return of Ashley Madison extortion scams, and should social media be doing anything about cheapfakes?

All this and much more is discussed in the latest edition of the award-winning “Smashing Security” podcast by computer security veterans Graham Cluley and Carole Theriault, joined this week by Jessica Barker.

Graham Cluley

Dear Ashley Madison user, I know everything about you. Pay up or else

Dear Ashley Madison user, I know everything about you. Pay up or else

Enlarge (credit: ashleymadison.com)

Four years after hackers dumped the intimate details of 32 million Ashley Madison subscribers, criminals have revived an extortion scheme that targets people who used the dating website to cheat on their partners.

In the past two weeks, researchers have detected “several hundred” emails that threaten to air those intimate details to the world unless the former subscribers pay a hefty fee.

“I know everything about you,” one of the emails, dated January 15, says. “I even know that you ordered some … let’s call them ‘male assistance products’ online on 12/11/2018 using your account at Bank of America N,a routing# 121000358 account# [redacted] for $ 75 for mailing to [redacted] CA [redacted]!” The extortionist goes on to say: “If you do not act very fast your full AMadison profile and proof of it will be shared with friends, family, and online over social media—and of course your internet orders.”

Read 9 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Biz & IT – Ars Technica