Latest PHISHING email
Official PPRuNe Chaplain
Joined: Apr 2001
Posts: 3,498
Likes: 0
From: Witnesham, Suffolk
I think phishing e-mails are an art form in their own right! A bit like graffiti, I suppose.
If it weren't for the sad fact that some gullible folks are taken in by them, I'd almost enjoy them.
Today, I had eleven telling me "Cahoot Online : Important Message Alert (Secure Channel) REF : 45889"
And a veritable sackful of "You have a parcel with us at the FedEx Delivery Company Nigeria. Contact for delivery"
You have to admire their determination! I don't even have a Cahoot account
If it weren't for the sad fact that some gullible folks are taken in by them, I'd almost enjoy them.
Today, I had eleven telling me "Cahoot Online : Important Message Alert (Secure Channel) REF : 45889"
And a veritable sackful of "You have a parcel with us at the FedEx Delivery Company Nigeria. Contact for delivery"
You have to admire their determination! I don't even have a Cahoot account
Chief Tardis Technician
Joined: Jan 2001
Posts: 554
Likes: 0
From: Western Australia S31.715 E115.737
I had one from the FBI saying they had my credit card with 22Mil US on it. I just had to write them an Email n it would be returned.
I lost the address, as my computer dumped the email. Stupid puter.


I lost the address, as my computer dumped the email. Stupid puter.



Administrator
Joined: Mar 2001
Aviation Qualifications: PPL
Posts: 8,121
Likes: 686
From: Twickenham, home of rugby
I lost the address, as my computer dumped the email.

And I bet it was Thiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiis big, as well!

SD
Joined: Apr 2006
Posts: 350
Likes: 0
From: Land of the Raj
There are those of us that play along with these fools with hilarious results, go to this website and have an evening of absolute hilarity.
scambuster419.co.uk: where 419 scam artists meet their match
KW
scambuster419.co.uk: where 419 scam artists meet their match
KW
Thread Starter
Per Ardua ad Astraeus
Joined: Mar 2000
Posts: 18,575
Likes: 4
From: UK
Got a cracker today:
You are requested to verify your membership details correctly with NatWest.
Verify and Update your identity **URL DELETED**
Failure to confirm and verify your Alliance & Leicester online account informations
might lead to your account permanently suspended.
They are certainly out there - be scared!
You are requested to verify your membership details correctly with NatWest.
Verify and Update your identity **URL DELETED**
Failure to confirm and verify your Alliance & Leicester online account informations
might lead to your account permanently suspended.
They are certainly out there - be scared!
Last edited by BOAC; 9th November 2010 at 13:38.
Cool Mod
Joined: Apr 1998
Posts: 6,189
Likes: 0
From: 18nm N of LGW
They MUST think its easy. Then again I suppose it is when someone, aged, and without the knowledge that these dangerous individuals can inflict on the innocent. How are they to be protected?
The villains couldn't a stuff so the vulnerable can be fleeced.
As you say - be scared.
The villains couldn't a stuff so the vulnerable can be fleeced.
As you say - be scared.

Joined: May 2007
Posts: 1,415
Likes: 2
From: Europe
While I hesitate to cross swords with a Cool Mod, the aged are probably more likely to have acquired the knowledge and experience needed to spot a scam a mile off than many of younger years. If they are properly "aged" they have probably been using computers since the 1970s, certainly since the 1980s, and will have been in on the birth of attacks via the wire into a computer and creating defences aganst them.
I find myself (aged) wearingly having to explain, over and over again, to people of tender and less tender years why what they have just done on a computer, like opening up an email attachment or visiting an unknown website in response to an apparently innocent email, is compromising security.
It always seems to come as a surprise to them.
Care to amend the phrase "aged, and without the knowledge" to "inexperienced of any age, and without the knowledge"?
Yours
Methusalah.
PS Ancient compooterist or not, I can't work out why in Jet Blast (perhaps elsewhere but I have not seen it) one now gets two or even 3 threads for the price of one; you open a thread, scroll down to the foot of the page, and there, below that, is another thread page, and perhaps another below that.
Further research shows that this is done by dragging the right hand slider down to the bottom, whereupon a box appears saying "Loading Next Page", and then the new thread appears. This can be done several times. The order of appearance seems to be random, but perhaps I just didn't spot a pattern.
This also works in "Computer issues...."
I find myself (aged) wearingly having to explain, over and over again, to people of tender and less tender years why what they have just done on a computer, like opening up an email attachment or visiting an unknown website in response to an apparently innocent email, is compromising security.
It always seems to come as a surprise to them.
Care to amend the phrase "aged, and without the knowledge" to "inexperienced of any age, and without the knowledge"?
Yours
Methusalah.
PS Ancient compooterist or not, I can't work out why in Jet Blast (perhaps elsewhere but I have not seen it) one now gets two or even 3 threads for the price of one; you open a thread, scroll down to the foot of the page, and there, below that, is another thread page, and perhaps another below that.
Further research shows that this is done by dragging the right hand slider down to the bottom, whereupon a box appears saying "Loading Next Page", and then the new thread appears. This can be done several times. The order of appearance seems to be random, but perhaps I just didn't spot a pattern.
This also works in "Computer issues...."
Last edited by Capot; 9th November 2010 at 16:44.
Cool Mod
Joined: Apr 1998
Posts: 6,189
Likes: 0
From: 18nm N of LGW
Capot, how eloquent! I too am aged, and I didn't start a computer until 1993. I suppose the reason I said what I did is because my two grandchildren are 11 and 13 and both run rings round me when it comes to operating a computer. The 11 year old is so smart she 'cleans' up after her and I have NO idea what she has been doing. No edit trail - nothing and both of them are now the proud owners of their own laptops. A sure sign of a spoilt child in my view. However, I don't begrudge them.
As for JB I usually stay away. I rather like my sanity the way it is. Could be why I am Cool. I did not choose that I have to say - one of the hierarchy did.
As for JB I usually stay away. I rather like my sanity the way it is. Could be why I am Cool. I did not choose that I have to say - one of the hierarchy did.
Joined: Jul 2001
Posts: 805
Likes: 0
From: U.K.
It didn't 'appen on my (company's) Elliot 903 either! However what gets my goat is some of my elderly colleagues who have been forced to join the computer age, don't really know what is going on but have managed to send and receive e-mails which is becoming so essential these days. They are attacked by those delightful people who manage to convince them that there is a fault in their computer (according to Microshaft) and you do "this" to download a special program to fix it e.t.c, e.t.c.
P.P.
P.P.

Joined: Sep 2005
Posts: 183
Likes: 0
From: U.K
More bang for your buck
Joined: Nov 2005
Posts: 3,513
Likes: 1
From: land of the clanger
Ah, J Smythe here, I wondered where that £2346.55 had gone, if you could just pop it back to me I'd be most obliged, Oh and keep twenty quid for your trouble.
Yours in anticpation
H Obutu.
PO BOX 776 Abuja, Nigeria





