You might receive an email that looks like it was sent by PayPal. The email might say that you need to click on a link to verify your PayPal account. If you don’t? The email says that your PayPal account will be shut down.
Here’s an example of a PayPal phishing email.
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Phishing emails usually don't sound right. Trust your instinct. For example, emails that look like they're from your bank but warn you that your account is about to be closed if you don't click a link are usually phishing. If in doubt, don't click. You can always log in to your bank account as your normally do to make sure everything looks okay. Phishing emails are often written by people with really bad spelling or poor grammar. It's unlikely that people that work at your bank or for your credit company don't know how to spell. Delete these immediately!
Spear Phishing: While many phishing emails target almost everyone, spear phishing emails target high profile business executives or public personas; basically lucrative targets. These emails are drafted after a good research on the target profile and the emails read very professional. Business Email Compromise: These are emails sent by scammers that look like the ones being sent from a colleague, business associate, partner, vendor, contractor, or from a company associated with the target company very closely. They request for urgent action, either for the purchase of equipment or for a pending payment. Here, the hacker knows that it is an unsuspecting piece of information that can pass off as an urgent business matter. These kinds of emails contribute to considerable cybercrime related business losses.
If you dont know them then dont answer them just delete them. This could be a form of "phishing". People trying to get information from you to scam you. Good luck.
Phishing is bad. Phishing schemes are ways for unscrupulous people to gain access to personal information about people. They can then use this information for unethical reasons.
To prevent yourself from being victimized by internet fraud, you can avoid phishing by being wary of suspicious emails from businesses you use, not clicking on pop up ads, ignoring money transfer scams, and having good anti virus.
There probably is no one particular country where phishing started. Since phishing is essentially a form of "social engineering" and people have been running cons and scams throughout recorded history, it is likely that the first phishing sprang up in multiple places independently and roughly simultaneously with the creation of email. The first "phishers" were probably from countries with fairly good computer infrastructures when email was first created. Phishing occurred even before the first recorded use of the term around 1996. As an example, warez community members on AOL were using AOHell as early as 1994 to steal credit card numbers to use to pay for AOL accounts.
a good website for a child email is yahoo.com
do whats right and whats good for majority
Yahoo.com hotmail.com
Troy Ronda has written: 'iTrustPage: Pretty good phishing protection'
A scam is a deliberate attempt to defraud you. Phishing is trying to obtain your data to steal your identity and/or credit. A rip off is where you are getting something, just not as good a quality, or for as good a price, as most people would feel appropriate.
No. Not every animal sees. Some use other senses to know whats going on. Bats area good example.
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