Comments on: PayPal fixes phishing hole
Web site flaw was being exploited in a scam to pilfer sensitive information from PayPal customers.
Web site flaw was being exploited in a scam to pilfer sensitive information from PayPal customers.
December 5, 2009 10:58 AM PST
December 5, 2009 10:03 AM PST
December 5, 2009 8:00 AM PST
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http://directorblue.blogspot.com/2005/06/making-phishers-solve-captcha-problem.html
In addition, SSL for all transactions is an absolute requirement. Another is communication plans that utilize webmail hosted on the financial website only (i.e., no direct communications through an email channel).
I think it's time for companies like PayPal, Ebay and your average credit card company to start requiring this from the customers, for their own protection.
http://www.essentialsecurity.com/
I am just starting up my online store, and am exploring ecommerce providers. I came across SWREG. They have new pricing for 0% (http://usd.swreg.org/zeropercentecommerce.htm). Has anyone used them, the features offered make it pretty interesting.
Mark
Why not biometrically scan our fingerprints?
Guess they don't want a rush of "finger" choppings?
Phishers are like email hackers, they go about their business so subtly and make the victim (usually helpless individuals) feel utterly guilty about not being too careful. One way to prevent phishing scams is to make sure that you are using an encryption program that lets you identify exactly who sent you the message and for what purpose it was sent. Phishing is one of the most obvious, but widespread forms of identity theft and it seems like people have done minimal to stop it, lets change our ways and spread awareness.
http://www.techknowbizzle.com/2006/03/anatomy-of-phishing-scam.html
- When will Paypal use SPF or equivalent email protection?
- by billstewart June 22, 2006 2:00 AM PDT
- It's nice that they found and fixed a bug. But 99.9% of the email I get purporting to be from Paypal or EBay is spam that *doesn't* come from Paypal/EBay's mail servers. When will they enable SPF so my mail client or mailbox service can discard it without bothering me with it? (Or if not SPF, then Microsoft's or somebody else's DNS-based email source verifier - I don't really care whose.) Digital signatures are nice too, but I want to discard most of the obvious forgeries first, and it's only about 1 step above a no-brainer to implement.
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