What to look out for when identifying an e-mail scam:
Deceptive Subject Lines:
These look as if they are genuinely related to the company supposedly sending the e-mail.
Forged Sender’s Address:
An easy deception method to make the e-mail appear as though it has come from the company it is claiming to be.
Genuine Looking Content:
They copy images and text styles of the real sites in order to fool the reader. Trusts and authentication marks are duplicated and they may even have genuine links to the company’s privacy policy and other pages on the legitimate website to create an illusion of authenticity.
Disguised hyperlinks:
E-mails may display a genuine website address, but when you click on it, the hyperlink will take you to a different website. Look out for a long website address as it will take you to the site after the @ symbol. Example: http://www.genuine-site.com-name@fraud-site.com
If you clicked on this hyperlink it would take you to http://fraud-site.com as it is after the @ symbol.
E-mail Form
These forms containing your personal information are submitted to remote computers, which the fraudsters access and then use your information to commit fraud on your bank accounts. |