Archive for phishing

Beware of Microsoft Security Essentials Malware

I was on Facebook the other day and clicked on an article that took me to a news site and I accidentally clicked on an Ad. It took me to a site and popped up a real looking warning that Microsoft Security Essentials had found malicious processes and I needed to click to get rid of them. This would have infected my machine with something. This is the problem with Ads on Facebook and any site. You never know where it is going to take you. If this happens to you. Don’t click on the warning. Go directly to Microsoft Security Essentials and see what it says. I have found a rash of Malware on my clients PCs and this is probably how they are unknowingly getting infected.

Be safe out there!

Joe

Digital certificates and malware: a dangerous mix

Take, for example, digital certificates which have been in the spotlight after Stuxnet used some or after Adobe’s servers were breached to sign malware. The purpose of a digital signature is to guarantee the authenticity of a file from a particular Help Net Security

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The Embarrassing Anatomy of a Phishing Scam

You’ve got to hand it to scam artists. They often succeed in spite of themselves. If I had a nickel for every time I retrieved a message from my inbox warning me that my PayPal account has been limited, or that my credit card has been suspended, well

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Beware of Bogus Scam Phone Calls from someone claiming to be “Microsoft”

A customer of mine fell pray to a phone call from someone claiming to be “Microsoft”. The guy said that there was a number of programs not running on his computer and that he would have to remote in to fix it and, oh by the way, it will cost $200 bucks. The guy remoted in and showed my customers a list of services that are not running, which is totally normal in Windows and charged my customer the $200 to supposedly fix it. 

Days later, My customer did get help from Microsoft and they called the number associated with the charge on his credit card. The guy on the phone said they didn’t know anything about it??? But would refund the charge within 24 hours. My customer cancelled the credit card anyway. The “real” Microsoft guy helped my customer scan his computer for Malware and only found some Adware and tracking cookies. So, we believe the scam was really just the money and not any siginficant Malware placed on his computer. 

Bottome line: Microsoft, Dell or whoever are not monitoring your computer for errors or programs and services running and they will never call you claiming such. I wish my customer would have called me first so he could have skipped this hassle, but he is safe now and that’s the most important thing. 

Safe computing,

Joe

Google Chrome browser best at catching phishing, study finds

“Although Firefox and Safari performed well in phishing response times, separate NSS Labs testing shows they lag behind Internet Explorer and Chrome in blocking socially-engineered malware,” wrote study authors Randy Abrams, Orlando Barrera and

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‘Tis The Season For Scams

With the arrival of the holiday season and with scammers becoming more creative, the Better Business Bureau (BBB) of South Dakota is advising residents to use extreme caution concerning “phishing” scams. Phishing is the act of trying to acquire

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Spear Phishing Remains Preferred Point of Entry in Targeted …

Spear phishing attacks remain the preferred means of entry for attackers conducting advanced persistent threat attacks against critical infrastructure, government

threatpost.com/…/spear-phishing-remains-preferred-point-entr…

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‘Ransomware’ locks up computers

This Ransomware seems to be pretty prevalent. Be careful what you click on. Avoid the urge to click 🙂 on pop-ups, instant messages or social media messages from people you don’t know. Keep your Windows maintenance up-to-date and make sure you have a good Anti-Virus. As I said before, there’s no need to pay for an Anti-Virus. Microsoft Security Essentials is an excellent FREE Anti-virus and best of all its Anti-Annoying, unlike the major Pay-for-annoyance brands. 

Practice Safe Computing!

Joe

A tricky new computer virus is making the rounds. Infected users see pop-up messages that claim to be from the FBI and threaten people with a fine or prison unless they pay up. The virus, meanwhile, locks up the computer, holding it and the user

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Go Daddy Attributes DNS Hack to Phishing | threatpost

A spokesman at Go Daddy, the popular domain registrar and web host company, believes that some of its users may have been phished – and that’s to blame for the barrage of ransomware some of its customers have been seeing in past

threatpost – The First Stop for…

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Wanted by the FBI?

I’m posting another article about this FBI Virus because there seems to be multiple iterations and occurrences of it. Be Careful what you click on!While it is not a real message from the FBI, it is a very real computer virus and one that is hitting Greene County computer owners at an alarming rate. Computer technician Jeremy Miller of Millennium 3 Computers in Paragould, where Edgar took his Paragould Daily Press

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