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"2. Phishing
The other way people can have their password stolen is by accidentally giving it away to a fraudster, due to a scam called ‘phishing’. Phishing is the attempt to acquire someone's personal information by posing as reputable people to get login information or other personal information from their victims. If you receive a suspicious email from a person or company requesting personal information, here are some ways to tell if someone is attempting to defraud you:
Check out the URL and/or email address on the email. If you notice a difference from the real company's URL or a sub-domain in the email address, the email may be a phishing attempt.
Hover over any links that appear in a suspicious email. Check to see where they lead. They may take you to another website that could harm your computer or compromise your information.
Check for spelling and grammatical errors and typos. Emails from credible, trustworthy organizations should not contain spelling and grammatical errors or typos. Exercise your best judgment if they do.
The email is from a company you either haven't dealt with in a while or never dealt with before. This should be a dead give-away that the email is ‘phishy’.
The message is demanding that you modify personal information by email. A credible organization would never ask for this sensitive information by email.
At Payza, we diligently protect our members’ information, but it’s just as important that our members keep their information safe from prying eyes in order to ensure total security.
If you receive an email that claims to be from Payza but was sent from a different domain or an email asking you to provide your password, transaction pin, or verify your account information, this email was not sent from Payza. Please forward these emails to phishing@payza.com."
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"2. Phishing
The other way people can have their password stolen is by accidentally giving it away to a fraudster, due to a scam called ‘phishing’. Phishing is the attempt to acquire someone's personal information by posing as reputable people to get login information or other personal information from their victims. If you receive a suspicious email from a person or company requesting personal information, here are some ways to tell if someone is attempting to defraud you:
Check out the URL and/or email address on the email. If you notice a difference from the real company's URL or a sub-domain in the email address, the email may be a phishing attempt.
Hover over any links that appear in a suspicious email. Check to see where they lead. They may take you to another website that could harm your computer or compromise your information.
Check for spelling and grammatical errors and typos. Emails from credible, trustworthy organizations should not contain spelling and grammatical errors or typos. Exercise your best judgment if they do.
The email is from a company you either haven't dealt with in a while or never dealt with before. This should be a dead give-away that the email is ‘phishy’.
The message is demanding that you modify personal information by email. A credible organization would never ask for this sensitive information by email.
At Payza, we diligently protect our members’ information, but it’s just as important that our members keep their information safe from prying eyes in order to ensure total security.
If you receive an email that claims to be from Payza but was sent from a different domain or an email asking you to provide your password, transaction pin, or verify your account information, this email was not sent from Payza. Please forward these emails to phishing@payza.com."
Cumps
Última edição por deathreason em Ter 26 Jun 2012, 22:51, editado 1 vez(es)
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