Protect Yourself and Report the Latest Frauds, Scams, Spams, Fakes, Identify Theft Hacks and Hoaxes
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You may have received an email like the one below that looks very authentic, like it came from Bank of America, or a phone call about the same subject. In this case, the scammers are even more clever; all of the links in the email appear to be real, valid Bank of America links, but there is an attachment; which undoubtedly contains a virus or of malware. Norton Antispam flagged the email and moved it to the junk folder. Besides containing viruses or other malware, these emails are often an attempt to get you to enter confidential information (typically a social security number, name, address, bank account information, etc., to allow the scammers to steal your identity and open credit cards in your name.
This email was not sent by Bank of America; Bank of America is a victim as well. This is referred to as spoofing (making a fake email that looks legitimate, "phishing" (when by email) or "vishing" (when by telephone). If you receive an email similar to the one below, and especially if you have no Bank of America account, have not made a payment like that, DO NOT click on the link, and do not enter any information on the forms there.
Here's what Bank of America says, on their website, about what to do if you receicve an email like this with an attachment:
"Ways to identify phishing and spoofing emails include:
If you receive a suspicious email that uses Bank of America's name, forward it to us immediately at abuse@bankofamerica.com ."
Remember, no reputable business would send you an email with an unsolicited attachment or requesting your personal account information. Any such email you receive asking for this information should be considered phony and brought to the attention of the business being 'phished'.
Anytime you need to go to a website for your bank, credit card companies or other personal, financial or confidential information; do not follow a link in an email; just type their address in your browser directly (such as www.BankofAmerica.com )
Below are actual phishing emails that started circulating in early 2013.
----- Forwarded message -----
-------- Original message --------
From: Marion Boone < acing34@gmail.com >
Date: 04/25/2013 1:11 PM (GMT-05:00)
To:
Subject: Your transaction is completed
Transaction is completed. $40091693 has been successfully transferred.
If the transaction was made by mistake please contact our customer service.
Receipt on payment is attached.
*** This is an automatically generated email, please do not reply ***
Bank of America, N.A. Member FDIC. Equal Housing Lender Opens in new window
' 2013 Bank of America Corporation. All rights reserved
And another version:
-----Original Message-----
From: Bank of America [mailto:combsr2@gmail.com]
Sent: Monday, March 25, 2013 12:41 PM
To: jbslemmer@benivia.com
Subject: [Norton AntiSpam]Your transaction is completedTransaction is completed. $6088 has been successfully transferred.
If the transaction was made by mistake please contact our customer service.
Payment receipt is attached.
*** This is an automatically generated email, please do not reply *** Bank of America, N.A. Member FDIC. Equal Housing Lender Opens in new window2013 Bank of America Corporation. All rights reserved
And please let us know about any suspicious calls or emails you receive. We look for patterns so that we can alert the authorities and victims to new scams, before it is too late!
The following documents and websites can help you learn more about virus attahments and how to protect yourself against malware.
For a comprehensive list of national and international agencies to report scams, see this page.
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Names used by scammers in the examples on this
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knowledge of nor connection to the scammer's use of their name and
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