Phishing and other Scams

In the field of computer security, phishing is the criminally fraudulent process of attempting to acquire sensitive information such as usernames, passwords and credit card details by masquerading as a trustworthy entity in an electronic communication. Communications purporting to be from popular social web sites, auction sites, online payment processors or IT Administrators are commonly used to lure the unsuspecting public. Phishing is typically carried out by e-mail or instant messaging,[1] and it often directs users to enter details at a fake website whose look and feel are almost identical to the legitimate one. Even when using server authentication, it may require tremendous skill to detect that the website is fake. Phishing is an example of social engineering techniques used to fool users,[2] and exploits the poor usability of current web security technologies.[3] Attempts to deal with the growing number of reported phishing incidents include legislation, user training, public awareness, and technical security measures.
A phishing technique was described in detail in 1987, and the first recorded use of the term "phishing" was made in 1996. The term is a variant of fishing,[4] probably influenced by phreaking,[5][6] and alludes to baits used to "catch" financial information and passwords.

Wikipedia definition 

From Microsoft: How to recognize phishing scams and fraudulent email

PayPal phishing scam website example and another example

What to do if you do fall victim!


Nigerian "411" scam

An advance-fee fraud is a confidence trick in which the target is persuaded to advance sums of money in the hope of realizing a significantly larger gain.[1] Among the variations on this type of scam, are the Nigerian Letter (also called the 419 fraud, Nigerian scam, Nigerian bank scam, or Nigerian money offer[2]),[3] the Spanish Prisoner, the Black money scam as well as Russian/Ukrainian scam (also extremely widespread, though far less popular than the former). Both the so-called Russian and Nigerian scams stand for wholly dissimilar organised crime traditions, they therefore tend to use altogether different breeds of approaches.

Wikipedia

FTP Nigerian scam info


Would you send this guy money?


eBay

14 things you have to know if you buy or sell on eBay

The PowerBook Prank

 


Security Tests

Test your browser's security now

Firewall security test

How anonymous are you on the Internet?

Gibson's "Shield's Up" test


Passwords

Perfect password generator

Random password generator

Strong password generator


Social Engineering

 


Quiz Time! 

Take the SonicWall Phishing and Spam IQ Quiz

Mail and Phishing IQ Test


This page last updated on Wednesday, June 10, 2009 09:29:40 -0500