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December 17, 2004 1:00 PM PST

This week in online scams

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The busy holiday shopping season is attracting an unsavory group of entrepreneurs: criminals hoping to part unsuspecting consumers from their money.

According to a survey published in August by the Federal Trade Commission, Internet shoppers tend to be lucrative marks. People shopping online have relatively high incomes and are thus attractive targets for scam artists.

Security experts warn that there are plenty of traps awaiting unsuspecting buyers online. One of the classic examples of holiday fraud trades on shortages. A Web site advertises popular gifts that have become hard to find because of overwhelming demand, and then shuts down and disappears, leaving buyers without their items or their cash.

The spike in holiday traffic also brings a 20 percent rise in the number of attempted security breaches, estimates VeriSign, which provides authentication of Internet transactions.

That traffic plays a part in one fraud scheme, in which scammers use a large number of stolen credit card numbers to make purchases on one site, to make sure those numbers are valid. The fraudsters then use those cards to buy goods at another e-commerce business. Another credit card scam that is increasingly popular, noted Trevor Healy, VeriSign's vice president of payment services, has corrupt employees issuing refunds on numbers that don't exist.

If the threat to e-commerce isn't enough to conjure images of the Grinch in Whoville, then take a look at your in-box. The mass-mailing Christmas e-card virus Zafi.D is clogging huge amounts of bandwidth and now accounts for one in 15 of all e-mails.

In addition, a hoax e-mail circulating the Internet has millions of Americans scurrying to add their cell phones to a national Do Not Call list to avoid telemarketers.

See more CNET content tagged:
online scam, VeriSign Inc., e-commerce, credit card, e-mail

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by silver93350 September 1, 2009 11:19 PM PDT
Another scam that has been going on for sometime now is a scam at Alibaba.com (a popular b2b network.) They target business owners, because they know that they have a lot of money or at least money to invest. I was recently ripped off for 8,000 dollars and am becoming disgusted with online fraud.

They (the scammers) have even been to know to highjack your email accounts, and gain access to your bank accounts, as well other personal information. The threat of identity theft is far too real. Identity theft can ruin your life.

I would please ask if you are concerned about identity theft that you consider LifeLock. I will leave a link below that shows what customers are saying about it:

http://www.report-online-scams.com/lifelock-review.html
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