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To better understand the issues relating to your legal situation or problem, our legal information and other law related facts may be of interest to you
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How Webs of Scammers Pull Off Internet Fraud "I have...PayPal [and] eBay logins...I wanna trade," said C-Power in an Internet chat room last week, talking to anyone who would listen. "Serious traders [contact] me for a legit trade." If, in the early days, phishing scams were one-person operations, they have since become so complicated that, just as with medicine or law, the labor has become specialized. Phishers with different skills will trade with each other in IRC chat rooms, says Mr. Abad. Some might have access to computers around the world that have been hijacked, and can thus be used in connection with a phishing attack. Others might design realistic "scam pages," which are the actual emails that phishers send. A phisher, just like his spammer cousin, sends out hundreds of thousands or even millions of emails, knowing that only a tiny fraction of the recipients will respond. These responses vary in quality; the best is a "full," which includes everything about the victim, such as name, account number, PIN and mother's maiden name. But even if a phisher has a "full," the real work has yet to begin. The goal of most phishers is to use the information they glean to withdraw money from your bank account. Western Union is one way. Another is making a fake ATM card using a blank credit card and a special magnetic stripe reader/writer, which is easy to purchase online. A phisher, though, may not have the wherewithal to do either of those. He might, for instance, be stuck in a small town where the Internet is his only connection to the outside world. In that case, he'll go into an IRC chat room and look for a "casher," someone who can do the dirty work of actually walking up to an ATM. Cashers, says Mr. Abad, usually take a cut of the proceeds and then wire the rest back to the phisher. Certain chat rooms are thus full of cashers looking for work. "I cash out," advertised "CCPower" last week on an IRC channel that had 80 other people logged onto it. "Msg me for deal. 65% your share." The average nonphisher might wonder what would prevent a casher from simply taking the money and running. It turns out, says Mr. Abad, that phishers have a reputation-monitoring system much like eBay's. If you rip someone off, your rating goes down. Not only that, phishers post nasty notices about you on IRC. "Sox and Bagzy are rippers," warned a message posted last week. Mr. Abad himself is just 23 years old, but he has spent much of the past 10 years hanging out in IRC chat rooms, encountering all manner of hackers and other colorful characters. One thing that's different about phishers, he says, is how little they like to gab. "Real hackers will engage in conversation," he says. "With phishers, it's a job.
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Return to all Credit Report legal information
Legal Articles about Credit Report
Credit Report Frequently Asked Questions
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Credit report correction techniques
Many times the credit bureau is busy and does not handle your dispute properly ...
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Basic rights under The Fair Credit Reporting Act
All Federal Laws are in consumer's favor and you will have the advantage ...
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Credit Scoring and the Lending Industry
Credit scoring is crucial to your ability to get a loan. When you apply for a mortgage, your lender ...
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Bitcoin is the Future: PayPal Changes Terms of Service to Take Your Content
CryptoCoinsNews
If you haven't seen this, you should, and you should share this with your friends, family, anyone who used PayPal in connection with a website providing online content. On July 1st, 2015, Paypal .... That doesn't have to but may be used to rip me off...
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Politicians turn Florida into for-profit college paradise
Miami Herald
Still another mystery shopper comment said: “After the long drawn-out application enrollment process, I began to get the impression that this school might be a bit of a scam because I talked to so many different people who all seemed so intent on being ...
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