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View Full Version : Re: Fraud Alert, Paypal spam etc from Scambusters newsletter



Catty1
06-17-2009, 08:43 PM
To subscribe to this very useful newsletter, visit: http://clicks.aweber.com/y/ct/?l=GRfqG&m=1co6xSlrGWtWfo&b=_7A.VUbPOZxdEABFFMj0iw

I get it regularly, and it's on top of the latest spam/scam trends.
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Seems like new or variations of existing Nigerian scams appear every week, but now the fraudsters use techniques that are a whole lot more convincing.

And if that doesn't work, these Nigerian scammers will
threaten you in an effort to scare you into taking action.

In this issue, we identity three new tricks to be on the
lookout for, together with a list of other common Nigerian
scams.

But first, we urge you to take a look at these top articles
from our other websites:

Social Sites and Identity Theft -- What You Need to Know
http://clicks.aweber.com/y/ct/?l=GRfqG&m=1co6xSlrGWtWfo&b=TKNfY2v0c_mOWcwBuw3ceQ

Tips for Choosing the Best Windshield Wipers
http://clicks.aweber.com/y/ct/?l=GRfqG&m=1co6xSlrGWtWfo&b=gDoBAUZ3NTaDUniUY_hKfg

High School Student Credit Cards: An Impossible Dream?
http://clicks.aweber.com/y/ct/?l=GRfqG&m=1co6xSlrGWtWfo&b=9VtmKBK9OghRZzfyZDihrw

Now Is the Time to Plan Some Family Outings
http://clicks.aweber.com/y/ct/?l=GRfqG&m=1co6xSlrGWtWfo&b=x_hnTrbKS3MLeshpKA3rmw

And now for the main feature...

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8 Cunning New Nigerian Scams Aim to Convince You They're Real
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Nigerian scam artists have wised up to the fact that many of us no longer get taken in by the Nigerian email scam from phony government or bank officials offering to split
multi-million dollar fortunes or inheritances, or Nigerian
scams involving forged overpayment checks that require us to send untraceable money-wires back to them.

http://clicks.aweber.com/y/ct/?l=GRfqG&m=1co6xSlrGWtWfo&b=o18VkPUfK4vjKf1Ev2WN7A

So, they've developed new ways to try to convince us that
their money-grubbing cons are really genuine.

New variations of the so-called Nigerian 419 scam (named for the section of the Nigerian constitution that deals with this crime) appear almost weekly.

Some of them are pretty clever. But with the right degree of healthy skepticism, you can still see through them.

We've got the low-down on three new tricks (or variations of existing Nigerian scams) to help you spot them.

1. After bogus checks, prepare for forged cash.

Those checks that came with letters telling us we'd won a
lottery or had been selected to become mystery shoppers are so yesterday.

Today's Nigerian scammers try to convince us with the "real" thing -- $100 bills.

In a new trick, seen for the first time in Kansas in April
this year, a scammer sent $3,000 worth of forged bills to a
man and asked him to use it to buy a Moneygram.

The victim had been corresponding by email supposedly with a woman in Nigeria. He received the "cash" from a person claiming to be the woman's uncle, who asked him to send the Moneygram to her so she could come to the US.

He fell for it, but the forgery was spotted at the Moneygram
office.

A few days later, a Nevada man tried the same thing, after
receiving $3,000 of forged notes. He was told he could keep $500 and tried to buy a $2,500 Moneygram with the remainder.

Action: Watch out for more of these tricks in the coming
months. Bluntly, never send Moneygrams on behalf of someone you don't know, whether you receive cash or a check.

2. Piling on the PayPal pressure.

We wrote previously about the use of forged PayPal emails
supposedly confirming that your account has been credited
following a sale you made on eBay.

http://clicks.aweber.com/y/ct/?l=GRfqG&m=1co6xSlrGWtWfo&b=LoptVuivKedAs07OvmmTXQ

Now it seems that the Nigerian scam crooks have developed a whole suite of "PayPal" messages they send out in swift succession, aimed at forcing you to send the item.

Relying on people's trust that PayPal is a safe way to do
business (which it is, if you use it correctly), the scammers
bid for an expensive item you're selling, then spoof a message to you from the online payment service saying the payment has been received.

Our advice, when this first happened, was to sign on to your PayPal account and check for yourself that the money was in your account.

To get around this, the scammers now send out a message, again claiming to be from PayPal but saying the money will not be credited to your account until you send confirmation, with a tracking number, that the items have been shipped.

If you reply to either of these emails questioning the
arrangement, the scammer sends another "PayPal" message threatening to close your account unless you complete the
sale.

Action: PayPal doesn't hold money pending a shipment nor does it threaten account closure in this way. As we previously advised, check your PayPal account. If the money isn't there, don't send your sale item.

(Another giveaway, by the way, is that the bogus messages usually have misspellings and poor grammar -- Nigerian scam artists haven't wised up to that yet!)

3. Here's "proof" of my story.

As we mentioned at the start, one of the most common,
longest-standing Nigerian scams is the invitation to share in some ill-gotten gains.

To get your hands, supposedly, on the dough, you have to
either supply personal bank account details (for ID theft) or
make a money-wire or credit card payment to get the money released (which, of course, it never is because it doesn't exist).

To deal with the inevitable skepticism, the scammers often
supply a link to a true story, usually about someone (the
benefactor) being killed in a road accident.

A variation, which we covered here, is to send a message
claiming to be a US soldier who got his or her hands on a
slice of Saddam Hussein's fortune.

http://clicks.aweber.com/y/ct/?l=GRfqG&m=1co6xSlrGWtWfo&b=taWjo.QTsBHvOp7OKAd5zg

Now scammers have knitted together a clever variation of these ruses by pointing to a story about money in Iraq that reallyhas gone missing.

Usually purporting to come from "Sgt. Martin Hems," this
letter points to a BBC story about hidden money in Iraq and the fact that five soldiers were questioned after some of the cache of cash went missing.

Action: Don't put 2 + 2 together and make 5. Just because
there's a true story doesn't mean that a claim to be linked
to it is true. The money may be missing, but it still isn't
coming your way!

Bottom line -- just don't believe any story that you're in for
a cut of someone else's fortune. It's 99.999% unlikely -- and you can get a lawyer to check out the remaining 0.001%.


More Nigerian Scams

Every week, scores of reports about Nigerian scams cross our desk.

Other current tricks that are doing the rounds include:

4. Hacking into Facebook accounts, then sending messages to all the listed friends claiming the account owner is in trouble and asking for cash to be wired for their rescue.

5. Collecting names and email addresses of people who leave messages on obituary site guestbooks and contacting them with a request for money, supposedly on behalf of the bereaved person.

6. Sending complimentary messages to bloggers and article authors (both online and in print) as a way of establishing a friendship that, sooner or later, results in a cash-call attached to a tale of woe.

7. Offering to buy your Internet domain name, then asking you to visit a site (their site) where you have to pay to have it valued.

8. Using Microsoft Word documents as attachments. These
contain details of the scam story but, because they are not in the main body of the email, they often don't get picked up by phishing and scam detectors in your security software.

The one thing you can be sure of with Nigerian scams is that they may not be worded well, but they are big-time sneaky in the way they try to fool us.

And you can be sure Nigerian scammers will find even more new tricks to test our gullibility. Count on us to help you stay one step ahead!

That's all we have for today, but we'll be back next week with another issue. See you then!