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Scamming Spammer Hooks the Wrong Person

CrypticSpawn writes "Read on SecurityFocus, a 55 year old woman spammed an FBI computer crime agent. She got caught mailing off a credit card scam to AOL users." Her scam targeted AOL users with messages saying their credit cards were refused during the last billing cycle, and linked to a false billing center page which demanded private information.

4 of 408 comments (clear)

  1. See for your selves by littleRedFriend · · Score: 5, Informative

    AOL Billing center sample page.

    --
    IANAL, but imagine a beowulf cluster of in Soviet Russia all your belong are base to us welcoming the new SCO overlords.
  2. There are so many... by MisanthropicProggram · · Score: 5, Informative
    Let's see:

    I once received an email with a link that said that I needed to "update" my eBay account with a new: credit card #, my SSN, DOB. The funny thing is I never had an eBay account - ever.

    I was at a hotel in Houston one time and I wanted to use my calling card to call home. After following the directions listed on the phone a few times, i was redirected to some telco that I've never heard of, and someone came on the phone, asked for the number I was calling and my calling card number. He then asked for my PIN. I said no way. He then told me that he couldn't make the call. I hung up.
    Later, at the airport, my card worked perfectly. I wish I got the name of the telco that was blocking access to my long distance company so I could have filed some sort of complaint with the FTC.
    Is it common practice for hotels to block access to your long distance provider so that you have to use their company for help that they charge you for?

    I've gotten so paranoid, I've repeatedly hung up on legitimate calls. It's unfortunate, but this shit is hurting legitimate businesses and making it harder for us consumers to know if we're being taken or not.

    --

    There is no spoon or sig.

  3. it gets better by monkeySauce · · Score: 5, Informative

    The 22 year old guy she was working with thought he was breaking the law with a 20-something hottie instead of this 55 year old overweight felon from Akron. He must feel pretty stupid about now.
    this story has more detail

  4. Re:Social Engineering by techt · · Score: 5, Informative

    No. The ones I've seen use this:
    http://www.myrealbankname.com:whatever@real IPaddre ssindotlessformat/

    The "www.myrealbankname.com:whatever" before the @ is not a URL, but a value sent to the real site which is denoted by the "realIPaddressindotlessformat".

    For example, cut and paste this into your browser:

    http://www.kuro5hin.org:section@1109654166/

    The above URL doesn't take you to Kuro5hin, it takes you to the Slashdot main page.