Eastern European hackers are offering to crack into any Facebook account for a fee of $100, payable online through Western Union, though circumstantial evidence suggests that the scheme might just as easily be geared towards ripping-off potential clients while delivering nothing.. The Facebook hacking service, offered by Ukrainian hackers via a domain registered in Moscow, offers to provide clients with the login and password credentials of any account. Potential clients are offered a money-back promise in cases where a targeted profile (which might belong to celebrities, politicians, or well-known companies as well as ordinary users) proves unhackable. The link for this article located at The Register is no longer available. . The Facebook hacking service, offered by Ukrainian hackers via a domain registered in Moscow, offers. eastern, european, hackers, offering, crack, facebook, account, payable. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
Brazilian police last week arrested the suspected kingpin of a gang which looted an estimated $37m from online banking accounts. Valdir Paulo de Almeida allegedly masterminded a scam to raid accounts using a Trojan horse sent by email to thousands of victims, mostly Brazilian. . This commonly used ploy enables crooks to capture security credentials of victims through keystroke logging. Using this information, criminals can transfer to themselves the money held in compromised accounts. Typically, the money is washed through the accounts of a number of middlemen to make tracing more difficult. The link for this article located at TheRegister.co.uk is no longer available. . Authorities in Brazil apprehend the mastermind of a phishing syndicate connected to $37 million worth of digital banking fraud involving keylogging software.. Brazilian Cybercrime, Online Banking Scam, Phishing Attacks. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
Always question an order you can't remember making. And never, ever give out your credit-card number for an online transaction you didn't initiate. That's the sage advice being given to hundreds of Amazon.com customers who recently received bogus e-mails that referred to phantom orders. . .. Always question an order you can't remember making. And never, ever give out your credit-card number for an online transaction you didn't initiate. That's the sage advice being given to hundreds of Amazon.com customers who recently received bogus e-mails that referred to phantom orders . The bogus e-mails, designed to appear as though they were acknowledgments for orders from Amazon.com, apparently were aimed at getting unsuspecting consumers to reveal their credit card information. Recipients who selected the link early last week reportedly were taken to a non-company page that asked for the credit-card information to aid in canceling the order. The site was removed by an Internet service provider when it was discovered it was being used to perpetrate the fraud, said Smith. The link for this article located at NewsObserver is no longer available. . Consistently scrutinize any instruction you cannot recollect issuing and refrain from sharing bank details.. Email Phishing,Fraud Detection,Online Transactions. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
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