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Analyst, Security Team
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Facebook hit by Nigerian 419 scam
Scammers are trawling Facebook for victims using a convincing twist on the notorious ‘Nigerian 419' scam.
Normally, 419 scams are easy to spot and involve email requests for money from supposedly rich individuals in countries such as Nigeria, from which the fraud gets its name. The latest Facebook attack is much craftier, however, because it hijacks the identities of real people known to Facebook members, asking for money under an apparently plausible guise. An Australian news site reports that one Google Australian employee who was contacted using the social networking site by a person known to her, asking for $500 dollars to allow him to return home from Lagos, Nigeria, where he claimed to be stranded. She became suspicious that the contact was bogus only after noting subtle irregularities in the fraudster's use of Australian English. "After chatting further, words such as "cell" instead of "mobile phone" tipped Wells off that she was not talking to her friend but someone who had taken over his account," the report said. "Many Facebook users don't even know how many friends they have on the site, let alone what they are all doing and where they are, and this is providing the scammers with a new vector of attack" said Graham Cluley of Sophos, the company that unearthed this particular scam. "Unfortunately this is just the latest skirmish in an ongoing battle taking place between Facebook users and cybercriminals intent on exploiting the site and its members for their own financial gain." Social networking's insecurities are many-headed. Emails from domains such as Facebook are more likely to reach an individual's inbox because they come from trusted domains; hijacking such domains to create fake email accounts been one of the year's growing problems on webmail systems such as Google, Hotmail and yahoo Full article here - http://www.techworld.com/news/index....&NewsID=106895
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