Account holders with at least two Australian banks have become victims of a phishing scam in which malicious code reveals the physical location of affected IP addresses using Google Maps. Bank account holders in Germany and the USA have also been targeted. The software installs a Trojan capable of key-logging user activity, hijacking infected computers. . The scam was circulated as a false news report claiming the Australian prime minister had suffered a heart attack. It installs a trojan and backdoor code to capture all user input as well as compromising a Web server to allow the hacker to hijack the victim The link for this article located at ICT World is no longer available. . The scam was circulated as a false news report claiming the Australian prime minister had suffered a. account, holders, least, australian, banks, become, victims, phishing, which. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
Recent cases indicate that federal courts are emphasizing the severity of identity theft by imposing significant prison sentences. In a recent osOpinion column about identity theft, the writer intimated that cops and legislators are "deaf to the cries of [identity theft] victims," and pointedly asked, "When will we begin to see the identity thieves behind bars?". . .. Recent cases indicate that federal courts are emphasizing the severity of identity theft by imposing significant prison sentences. In a recent osOpinion column about identity theft, the writer intimated that cops and legislators are "deaf to the cries of [identity theft] victims," and pointedly asked, "When will we begin to see the identity thieves behind bars?" Recent events show that law enforcement's and legislatures' hearing has gotten a lot sharper, and that law enforcement is already getting good at catching and putting identity thieves in prison. On May 2nd, Attorney General John Ashcroft announced a nationwide sweep of federal identity theft cases, including 73 criminal prosecutions of 135 individuals in 24 judicial districts. The crimes involved in these cases ranged from old-fashioned fraud to murder. One defendant allegedly found and killed a homeless man so he could fake his own death and avoid prosecution for counterfeiting. Defendants in other cases included people who located houses owned by elderly citizens and assumed their identities so they could fraudulently sell or refinance the properties. The link for this article located at osOpinion is no longer available. . National judiciary ramps up initiatives to combat fraud impersonation, implementing rigorous sanctions on culprits while safeguarding those affected.. Identity Theft, Criminal Prosecution, Law Enforcement Actions, Victim Rights. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
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