Friday, 7 November 2014

Google study finds email scams are more effective than you'd expect

There’s a widespread belief that phishing emails have a very low success rate, & depend on a huge volume at virtually zero unit cost to get a return. Don’t relax just yet, thought, because a recent co-operative study involving Google & UCSD, shows a success rate of up to 45%:

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/11/07/phishing-scams_n_6116988.html?&ncid=tweetlnkushpmg00000046 / weird emails trick handing over your information new study Google UCSD University of California San Diego websites phishing emails bogus pages imitate legitimate sites private details information data hackers hack hacking researchers tricked trick expected 100 phishing emails random sample self-reported Gmail users research random sample Google's Safe Browsing system how scams work websites Google Forms access data how people interacted emails websites worst performing phishing websites 3 percent users submitted their data most effective phishing sites 45 percent big business scammers attacker responsible millions of phishing emails access account account valuable enough Gmail's search function account looking term terms wire transfer bank get money account's contact list send emails person's friends family colleagues fake stories we were mugged send cash Google's advice staying safe enable two-step verification your email account report any suspicious emails respond responding suspect your account compromised realized something seemed off website visited friend asked you about weird email your address hackers access compromised accounts credentials scams problem online cyberattack against JPMorgan Chase hack 76 million households vulnerability vulnerable /

No comments:

Post a Comment