Saturday, July 31st, 2010

Beware New Holiday Spam Scams

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The holiday season and the poor economy are bringing out all kinds of e-mail spam scams. Here are the latest you may receive or will soon receive — don’t reply to them:

Survey and Gift Scam: An e-mail comes from a financial institution stating, “You’ve been selected to take part in our quick and easy eight-question survey. In return, we will credit $80 to your history.” You’re directed to an online survey page where you’re asked innocuous questions and next asked for your bank detail data. Don’t do it — these scammers will simply use that data to drain your explanation of cash.

Investment Proposal Scam: The e-mail writer urgently needs your help in getting a person’s money out of a country by using your bank detail as a place to electronically deposit the money. They’ll need your explanation access info, of course, to set up the transfer. And there will, indeed, be a transfer: All your money transferred from your history to the scammer.

Get Quick Cash Scam: Money’s tight, and these scammers know it. They entice you with seemingly quick and easy loans, transferred immediately into your detail. “All applications accepted. No credit check,” the e-mail promises. visit the application link or signal and, once you’re approved (you always are), give them your explanation info. Don’t fall for that scheme.

Remember: As a rule of thumb, unsolicited e-mail schemes are never legit. Free offers that are made to look like they come from valid businesses and institutions you’ve never dealt with are nearly always scams.

Times are fit — don’t let e-mail scammers invent them harder for you.

Don’t forget the lesson of the good-natured woman who simply wanted to help someone in need and responded to an e-mail plea for help. She lost $400,000 to heartless thieves.

These scammers didn’t care that they cleaned…

[Source] dhiram

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