Scam emails and letters can be dangerous, if you believe
the individual talking to you. How many people do you know of who would
be crazy enough to send you US $10 million, just like that?! Never
happened to me, and I know people who have that much money...
If you have doubts, talk about it to other people: friends and
family, but also Internet web sites talking about scam (like mine
right here, see the Contact
page if you want to talk to me...)
Ask these people to read the email or letter and they
will let you know what they think. Again, nobody receives
spontaneous job offers to good to be true or checks with
large sums of money.
Because the biggest problems started with Nigerians, it was
named after them: Nigerian 419 Scam. However, today these
scam happen from all over the world including Europe and
Canada and many other countries. Note that these
scams started before the Internet. They used Telex and
Faxes to start with. They could still do so (thought it's
more expensive for them, richer scammers could do that too.
And in the US you have Local Fax Services accessible via
the Internet... so watch out!)
One important thing to keep in mind: there is nearly
no way to get your money back if you sent it to another
country. That's because trying to rescue US $20,000 from
an African country will cost you over US $100,000 in fees.
Not worth it and thus, just keep your $20,000. People in
Nigeria are generally poor and when they are not they
don't need your money. And remember that $10 for an
African can already go a long way. So if someone tells
you that somehow the fee is $2,000... think about it twice!
Each country has its own policy in regard to scams like
those. If you are american, the Federal Trade Commission
accepts scam emails here: spam@uce.gov
(though uce.gov does not exist anymore... it is still listed
on many of the ftc pages!)
I'm not too sure what they were doing with the stack of spam emails...
statistics? I guess they turned it off because there was no point
anymore. You should visit the
FTC page in regard to scams
if you had any problems or intend to talk to scammers.
There is also a page about
spam.
If you fell for a scam in the U.S. that involved money and you are
yourself living in the U.S., you may want to check out
John S Chapman.
His services are not free, but he will not charge you unless you
can recoop money from the scammers.
Well... unless you want to practice Scam baiting.
This is a fun game and I amuse myself at it once in a
while. But it takes some time so I don't do it every time!
Anyway, Scam baiting is when you answer these people.
Of course, you do not give them any information such as
your bank account number, etc. In general, you ask them to
prove who they are. That way they send you documents such
as fake photo IDs, passes, pictures of them with a panel
with words you dictate to them, pictures with them making
a face of some sort, etc. and you can put them on
your website. Ha! Salif is a
good example. He sent me a picture ID created on a computer
with some webcam... You can read the information on how
I can tell that's a fake picture ID. Doesn't matter much,
if he wants money for a living he can just go to work like
me.
Money Laundering
Other scams are about people really sending you
money. That's extremely dangerous! These people usually
earn that money illegally (selling drugs, prostitutes,
illegal games, etc.)
Then later they need someone to transfer large sums of money
between countries. If you are the sheep you will not
only be in danger of being killed by these people but also
you will be on the list of people the FBI, Scottland Yard,
KGB, etc. are searching for Money Laundering. This
often happens when people tell you they search for
resellers who manage their own account in your
country.
Money Laundering is a crime which is pretty badly punished.
Do it only if you want to become a criminal. You may want
to read this
canadian page about it
(available in French and English).
Just like with other scams, criminals will tell you that
everything is fine. You know... you'll just be helping them
in their business, perfectly legitimate (and the company
papers they present to you will certainly be legitimate,
but how is the company really making money?!) To give you
an idea, the money laundry market in the U.S. and
Canada are both in billions of dollars.
Unwanted commercial emails with 0.1% legitimate advertising/business
and the rest...
For the largest part, spam emails are annoying. They sell products
which most of the time are legal. However, they often use websites
which are not just questionable most are simply fraudulent.
In general, if you receive an email you didn't ask for: delete it!
Okay, follow the link to see what they are talking about. Then
delete it and don't purchase anything. Quite frankly, I have looked
at many of the Cialis, Viagra, Xamax, etc. websites, 99% of them
are not properly represented legally. Some will even pretend that
they are registered with the
BBB Online
or some other similar organization.
For sure, look at how secure their secure web pages are. Is it
on an HTTPS server (i.e. the location starts with https://...)?
Do they have a 3rd party certificate? Verify the certificate
by (1) clicking on it, it must open another window in which you
will see the actual business references; and even more important:
(2) make sure that you are at the right page by using the right
mouse click and looking at the actual URL of the sub-window (some
people do show you the location bar such as VeriSign, but still
check with the right mouse button, if the right mouse does not
seem to react normally, forget it!)
These days, there are quite many auto-spam emails... I have
started a page which list what I receive the most and is
clearly spam:
Increasing Spam.
Since I created Turn Watcher
and advertised it here and there, I get over 100 emails a day from
totally unwanted sources. Really, I have not be wearing a watching
since I was 18, I'm doing fine in bed (it sounds like it at
least...), I have a company logo, I don't need to lose weight,
I don't play at casinos, I don't want so called free computers if
I have to enter 20 other risk free deals (imagine the work!
you need to enter your credit card info 10 times, then you need to
call all these jerks back to cancel, all of that for a
$500 computer?! not worth it!!! and very risky too), and also I
don't have debts so cheap mortgage I don't need either.
A little bit of history... SPAM is the name of some canned meat.
This dates from before the Second World War. At the time, in
England, they authorized and did let people eat as much SPAM as
they wanted. Of course, that certainly helped the company selling
SPAM meat at that time. But after the war, people were fed up so
the sales decreased dramatically. The Monthy Python, later, made
fun of SPAM in different sketches. The first recorded email of
SPAM was in 1978. Other mediums had been used before to send
SPAM: fax, phone, and even the telegraph in 1904! So... it's
already 104 years that our new super devices of communications
have been used to SPAM each others...
I put under Game letters and email which say that I won
something like $1 million or more (other than Lottery, most of the
Lottery emails are under Scams because these people are trying to
get your bank account information and not just US $20.)
What's that about these US $20?!? Well... you see, if you win they
need to send you a check and that cost them some money so you need
to pay a processing fee.
Ho no! Wait! I didn't read the fine print. I'm buying a newsletter.
How many copies a year? About zero? Is it really worth US $20? Any
samples anywhere? A website where I can do my purchase? Hmmm....
Okay! The truth is that this system has been abused so much that one
day the governments decided to write a law forbidding people who
offer you to wind something to charge you ANYTHING to receive your
prize. In other words, if you are paying, you didn't win. Cool hey?!
If I'm correct, I receive about 10 such letters a year saying that
I won and I need to send between $5 and $25 to receive the information
on how to get my prize. So watch out! There aren't that many real
companies offering prizes of US $1 million or more.
Publishers Clearing House is one of them. Notice that
they have a website...
Phishing started pretty much at the time businesses started to
accept credit cards as a mean of payment on the Internet (in the
mid-90's of the 20th century). Hackers will duplicate a
legal business pages and ask people to go there and buy something.
When someone does fall for it, that someone actually is handing
his/her credit card information to a thief.
Now, Phishers are also trying to get your login and password
(what we call credentials.) This happens for larger compagnies
these days, but it can very well change in the future. Especially
targeted are Paypal, eBay and bank credentials.
If you ever get caught, report it right away. You may feel stupid,
but at least you won't lose your money (you have 60 days with banks,
with eBay and Paypal, you are likely to have lost some or all of
your money already... still report the problem and try all you can
to get reimbursed! And it is important to have your account closed
or changed with a new password.)
Quick notes on how to avoid phishing:
A good way is to click on your usual bookmark and not follow a link from
an email. This is a surer way to reach your bank, Paypal, eBay & the
other businesses that you are working with. Note that some web pages may
go in and tweak your bookmarks. So please, follow the following
points anyway.
Once on the site, see if it looks current. If you see an old version,
you're probably on a hacker site! However, this is now sufficient. The
best hackers will sweap the business's webpage before hand and you will therefore
arrive on a page which looks 100% like the original.
Verify the address in your location bar. It has to start with
https://www.mybank.com and not anything else. Your bank and
other institutions may add more names on the left side as in:
https://business.accounts.mybank.com This is fine. The
name of your bank MUST appear between the first two // and
the following /. In other words, this location (URL) could come from a
hacker: http://12.64.23.11/www.mybank.com. So remember this: the only
valid name is between the first two // and the next /.
If you have to enter any credential (login, password, credit card
number) make sure the URL starts with https <- with the letter "S"
at the end of HTTP which stands for Secure. Your browser shall NOT
tell you that it cannot verify the certificate. That is, if it does,
then the key is not trustworthy for a transaction with a compagny
which deals with credit card or bank accounts.
If you are purchasing something at a new business, verify their
certificate. If you cannot find a link on the page saying Certificate
or something like that, go away. When you click on the certificate,
it opens another window. Check the address (URL) in that window. If you
cannot see it, look at the Page Information (right click with your
mouse, use the Apple key + mouse click on Macs). That page will include
the URL/Address/Location. Make sure that the location correspond to the
certificate issuer. For instance, you have VeriSign and GoDaddy certificate.
Visit their websites to see what their URL is.
Use whois to know who owns the domain name. If it doesn't correspond
to the business on the website, be super suspicious! There are many websites
which you can use to get whois information. At a prompt on a Linux or Mac
computer, type: whois example.com
An additional check you can make (and if you spend more than US $100,
I strongly advice you do!), search for the company name in the state or
country where it prentends to be registered. If you cannot find it, forget
it! 99% of the websites selling Cialis, Prozac, Viagra, Xanax & Co.
are not real businesses. There are other such businesses like these
really cheap OEM Software which are actually copies of originals. Plus,
quite often they will be located in another country and thus you will have
to way to get your money back!