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Avoid Getting "Hooked" by Phishers
By Brad Place, Pinnacle's Web Administrator
Phishing isn't what people do on Percy Priest Lake. It's a high-tech scam in
which trusted brands of well-known banks, online retailers, and credit card
companies are highjacked and used to create bogus e-mails and websites that
fool you into divulging personal financial data such as credit card numbers,
account usernames and passwords, social security numbers, etc.
By sending out urgent messages that ask you to "update" or "validate" your
account information, phishers are able to steal your identity and run up bills
or commit crimes in your name. The worst part is that phishers are usually
very, very good at tricking you - using the brand's logo or sending you to what
appears to be a bonafide website of the company you know and trust.
With phishers now sending out an average of five million e-mails per month (up
from 250,000 in 2004), it's important to know how to protect yourself.
Pinnacle suggests these tips to help avoid getting hooked by a phishing scam:
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If you get an e-mail or pop-up message that asks for personal or financial
information, do not reply or click on the link in the message. Legitimate
companies don't ask for this information via e-mail.
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If you are concerned about your account, contact the organization in the e-mail
using a telephone number you know to be genuine, or open a new Internet browser
session and type in the company's correct Web address. In any case, don't cut
and paste the link in the message.
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Don't e-mail personal or financial information. E-mail is not a secure method
of transmitting personal information.
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Before making a transaction or providing information, look for indicators that
the site is secure. Look for a lock icon on the browser's status bar or a URL
for a website that begins "https:" (the "s" stands for "secure").
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Review account activity regularly. Look over credit card and bank account
statements as soon as you receive them to determine whether there are any
unauthorized charges.
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Use anti-virus software and keep it up to date. Some phishing e-mails contain
software that can harm your computer or track your activities on the Internet
without your knowledge. Your operating system (i.e. Windows or Linux) may offer
free software "patches" to close holes in the system that hackers or phishers
could exploit.
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Be cautious about opening any attachment or downloading any files from e-mails
you receive regardless of who sent them.
Report suspicious activity to the FTC. If you receive spam that is phishing for
information, forward it to spam@uce.gov. If you believe you've been scammed,
file your complaint at www.ftc.gov, and then
visit the FTC's Identity Theft Web site at
www.consumer.gov/idtheft to learn how to minimize your risk of damage
from ID theft. Visit www.ftc.gov/spam to
learn other ways to avoid e-mail scams and deal with deceptive spam.
How Pinnacle is fighting phishing
Last month Pinnacle's bill pay partner installed an update to its system that
serves as a response to various 'phishing' scams that have become very common
on the Internet.
The system combats phishing by asking bill pay users for a security word. Now
when Pinnacle's bill pay clients log into online banking and choose bill pay,
they are redirected to the bill pay partner's site.
On the first bill pay use after the upgrade, users are asked to create a
security word for future logins. This is a one time request. Pinnacle's bill
pay partner remembers the word and displays it briefly during every subsequent
bill pay session. If a Pinnacle client visits a site claiming to be our bill
pay site and no security word is displayed, it will be a red flag to leave the
site immediately and report it to Pinnacle.
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