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News Wires
SCAMS You Should Avoid: Do not respond to any of these scams, not even to remove
your name from the list
- Job Scams- (See our
guide for Job Seekers) Shipping Scams and Money Laundering: If a company
contacts you and asks that you process payments or accept checks/money orders
for them into your own account or an account you have set up for them- THINK
TWICE. This is almost always a scam. Most often they will tell you to deposit
the money order in your own account and forward the money to them electronically
or via a money order immediately or to set up a new account (using your name and
SSN) that includes electronic/online banking. By the time you find out the money
order you got from "the customer" bounced, they will have already removed the
money from the account leaving you holding the bag. The commission you take for
this service could even implicate you in the crime. You will almost always be
held liable for the lost money, often thousands of dollars.
Never sell a product to a person who sends you more money than needed and
asks that the extra money be returned. That check or money order is probably
bogus also. Not only will you be out the product but the money order you sent as
well.
Never reship a product for an "out-of-country" company, especially if you
don't know what you are shipping. It could be stolen goods.
The bottom line- these "at home part time jobs" sound too easy. Grandma
is right- if it sounds too good to be true it probably is trouble.
- Special VISA/Mastercard Scam Alert- Confirmed:Should you get a phone call
from a VISA or Mastercard “employee” trying to confirm unusual spending activity
AND that person asks for code on the back of your credit card--- DO NOT give
that number out. They will sound very professional but may not be from that
company. They may even tell you how the scam works- for instance telling you
that charges are always under $500. Then they will ask you for the code on the
back of your credit card. DO NOT give that number to the caller. They often say
that the charge is for an Anti-Marketing Device. Contact VISA or Mastercard
Fraud numbers on your credit card to confirm that they made that call and deal
with the situation that way.
Contact VISA or Mastercard Fraud numbers on your credit card to confirm
that they made that call and deal with the situation that way.
- Account verification or "phisher" scams: For several years, individuals have
purchased domain names that are similar to those of legitimate companies. It may
be in a form such as: abccompany-accounts.net. The real company is abccompany
but it does not have a "-accounts" in its domain. These con artists then send
out millions of emails asking consumers to verify account information and even
SSN. Prior to agreeing to do this, check with the company directly and see if
the email originally was sent from them. In almost all cases, you will be told
that it is a scam. The latest: verification scams are: E-Bay, Best Buys,
Discover Card, e-gold.com, ebay-verification.net and change-ebay.com. Almost all
Internet server names have been used for this scam as well. Companies that have
been known to be victims of this scam include: AOL, MSN, Earthlink,PayPay,
Discover Card, Bank of America, Providian and perhaps Wells Fargo.
- Sign-in Rosters: There are some companies and governmental agencies
(colleges, EDD, state-sponsored programs) that ask you to put your name and SSN
on a sign-in roster. Please be aware that identity thieves may sign up toward
the end of a page (purposely) so that they can copy and collect personal
identifying information. If you encounter a sign-in roster like this, the best
way to handle the situation is to write the following instead of your SSN -
"will provide in person." You might also question a company/school
representative about this practice and see if you can get it discontinued. It is
dangerous and should be stopped. Some state laws will be addressing this in the
next year or so. If this is a classroom situation and you do not need the
credits, you may choose to leave the space for SSN either blank or filled in
with 000-00-0000. Please do not make up a number. It might belong to another
innocent person and hurt his or her credit.
- Help move money from my country," aka Nigerian 419 Scam- Everyone has
received an email from a representative of a foreign government asking you to
help move money from one account to another. This scan still nets $100 million
annually so people are falling for it. Nigerian Money Offers now account for
about 12 percent of the scam offers people have said they've received, according
to a recent National Consumers League poll. However complaints about these
offers increased 900 percent from 2000 to 2001. The lastest versions of this
scam include a dying woman, a soldier and emails other than from Nigeria.
- Canadian/Netherlands Lottery- "You Have Won"- Unless you entered a lottery
or bought a ticket to win a prize, these are scams. They originate from the
Netherlands and other foreign countries. This scam can cost you more than
$20,000. Many include: From: "Promotions Manager" : CONGRATULATIONS! WERKEN BIJ
DE LOTTO, 41132, NL-1007 DB AMSTERDAM, THE NETHERLANDS. NEW- Via US Mail there
is a new scam about a "Spanish Lottery." Do not respond, turn it over to your
local postal inspector.
- "Free Credit Report" Emails- Almost all of the "free credit report" emails
you receive are scams. Either the person is trying to find out your social
security number or will be billing you for a service later on. Do your homework
and check out the company via the Better Business Bureau, US Attorney and
Federal Trade Commission. You don't know who is sending these emails. One offer
has even been tracked to a porn web server in Los Angeles.
- "You have won a free gift" -You may receive either a phone call or email
about a free gift or prize. You just need to send your credit card info to take
care of shipping and handling. DON'T. Free means free, there should be no
charge. Also, you must consider if this is a group sending out a cheap gift in
exchange for finding a "live" phone number or email address. Responding may
result in hundreds of spans or telemarketing calls.
- Email chain letters/pyramid schemes- There are many of these. One says that
Bill Gates is testing a new email-tracking program and wants your help. If you
forward the email to your friends, Microsoft will pay you $__ for each person
that receives it. Others say that you will get a gift or money from each person
who comes after you. Another tells you: Follow the simple instructions below and
your financial dreams will come true. Order all 5 reports shown on the list
below. For each report, send $5 CASH,T This one even says that the FTC says this
is legal. These are pyramid scams. They are for the most part illegal and are
just variations on the old postal chain letters. Do not respond or forward these
emails. As ScamBusters said, "Remember, any email that asks you to forward it to
your friends is a scam. We literally know of no exceptions."
- "Find out everything on anyone" - This email is trying to solicit $__ in
order to buy a CD or program that you can use to find out personal information
on another person. These are always public records and may be someone who just
wants your credit account number to use themselves.
- Questionnaires: This is the time of year when you may get an email holiday
card from an "old friend." It may come from a chat room friend. These include
questions that help the person sending it find out your birthdate, passwords
(favorite things) and even blatantly may ask for your SSN. Do not answer these,
even with false information. You only let the other party know that they have
reached a "live" person and you may eventually give away information you don't
realize can hurt you. These people are slick and can easily convince you to
divulge information you don't intent do. That is why they are called con
artists.
- Do not place your Social Security number or date of birth on resumes that
you send out for jobs. We have heard about several instances where a person
placed a "help wanted ad" either on the Internet or in a newspaper and collected
SSNs that way.
- Job advertisement scams: Recently there have been scams involving Internet
Job Websites (for instance Monster.com) and Newspaper Want Ads. Under no
circumstances should an applicant provide a SSN to a "HR person" found through a
newspaper ad or an Internet ad prior to an actual interview or prior to
authenticating both the company and the person asking for the information. If
you have any doubts, contact the company directly using a phone number found on
the company Website or telephone book. Remember, anyone can set up a Website.
You may choose to check the company out with the Better Business Bureau for that
area as well as the state attorney general to make sure that they are a
legitimate company. Typical tip-offs: Email addresses that do not include a
company name in the domain section, mailing addresses or fax addresses in cities
that differ from corporate headquarters.
- In-Store security scams: Two have been brought to our attention. Individuals
identifying themselves as in-store security may request a customer's help in
catching a bad employee. They ask for personal information or ask you to
pre-fill out a credit application and then give it to the employee. The second
form involves a scamster who is watching a customer fill out a form or pay for a
bill with a credit card. Just prior to the employee calling it in for approval,
they call that clerk and ask the information stating that the card/application
is from a thief. Make sure that any store employee who approaches you has proper
identification and that if a call interrupts an employee during a transaction,
that you check it out with store security.
- Telephone scams: We anticipate that consumers will get calls from
"charities" asking for donations. Do not provide credit card information over
the telephone. Secondly, we also anticipate scamsters will take advantage of the
new "do not call" lists being compiled by state governments. No one from the
state will be calling consumers asking if they want to be included on the "do
not call list" nor will these lists require a consumer to provide a SSN via
telephone.
Find out if your identity has been stolen... just simply do a Dragnet
Search with one click of the mouse!
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