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3.2 Billion Dollars Lost to Phishing in 2007

mrneutron2003 brings us FastSilicon's summary of a Gartner survey which found that 3.2 billion dollars were lost in 2007 to phishing scams. "Gartner's latest survey into the realm of phishing attacks paints a rather bleak picture for 2007, with a record estimated loss of $3.2 Billion (that's Billion, with a B) U.S. Dollars. Overall loss per incident fell (to $886 from $1,244 lost on average in 2006) but the numbers of individuals who fell victim rose quite sharply from 2.3 Million in 2006 to a staggering 3.6 Million. Though online portals Paypal and eBay remained the most spoofed brands, it appears phishers are getting more creative utilizing fake electronic greetings cards, foreign businesses, and charitable organizations in their attacks on consumers. Furthermore these criminals are increasingly targeting debit card and banking credentials rather than credit cards, because the fraud protection mechanisms there are far weaker, according to a study done at The University of California at Berkeley.

3 of 112 comments (clear)

  1. Phishing for spam. by Ochu · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I've been saying for a while, phishing is a far bigger problem than spamming. The attach rate is a lot higher, because people think they are responding to a genuine email from Bank of America, the rewards are orders of magnitude higher, because you can take all their money, while the costs are just a bit higher. Sure, its slightly illegal, but to be honest, that clearly has no effect.

  2. Legal Phishing by jomama717 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I can't wrap my mind around it, but it seems that there is some relationship to this phenomenon and that of $7.8 Billion in unused gift cards (just this year!!)

    The end result is the same, some group (in this case retail store executives) is getting billions of dollars in exchange for exactly nothing.

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  3. Re:debit card protection by Billosaur · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I'm surprised that more banks don't make you retrieve credit/debit cards at local branches. Lots of cameras to help verify who you are. I know that when I want to change my PIN, I have to go to a WAMU branch to do it, whereas I can remember doing it online just a few years ago.

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