Protect Yourself and Report the Latest Frauds, Scams, Spams, Fakes, Identify Theft Hacks and Hoaxes
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With news stories of hacking into credit card companies, Facebook accounts, email accounts, cell phones being hacked and more, scammers are busy trying to take advantage of fears of being hacked. While it certainly is possible to have all of these hacked, many scammers simply prey upon consumers' fear of being hacked to extort their victims into surrendering money. The FBI is seeing an increase in the number of reported extortion attempts of a sexual nature; what's known as sextortion. In one recent month, the FBI's Internet Crime Complaint Center, or IC3, received an additional 13,000 complaints about the sextortion scam over the previous months. Sextortion occurs when someone threatens to distribute your private and sensitive material if you don't provide them with images of a sexual nature, sexual favors, or money.
Here is a common, and unfortunately, popular example of this.
A victim receives an email similar to the one below. In this email, the scammer claims:
After making these claims, he then issues his threats: you pay him by bitcoin or he will send the video to everyone in your contact list.
I am well aware ????????? one of your passphrase. Lets get right to point. You do not know me and you are most likely thinking why you are getting this e mail? There is no one who has compensated me to check about you.
Well, I placed a malware on the X streaming (pornographic material) website and guess what, you visited this web site to experience fun (you know what I mean). While you were viewing videos, your browser began working as a RDP that has a key logger which provided me with accessibility to your display screen as well as webcam. Just after that, my software gathered your entire contacts from your Messenger, Facebook, as well as e-mail . After that I made a video. First part shows the video you were viewing (you have a fine taste ; )), and second part shows the view of your web cam, yeah its you.
You get just two solutions. Lets read these choices in details:
First alternative is to just ignore this email message. As a result, I am going to send out your very own videotape to just about all of your personal contacts and also think about about the disgrace you will get. And as a consequence in case you are in an intimate relationship, just how this will affect?
Other choice should be to pay me $7000. Lets call it a donation. Subsequently, I will straightaway delete your video footage. You could keep going on your way of life like this never occurred and you would never hear back again from me.
You'll make the payment via Bitcoin (if you don't know this, search for "how to buy bitcoin" in Google).
BTC Address:
[case-SENSITIVE so copy & paste it]
If you have been curious about going to the cops, good, this email message can not be traced back to me. I have taken care of my actions. I am not trying to ask you for so much, I only want to be paid for.
You now have one day in order to make the payment. I've a special pixel in this message, and now I know that you have read through this email. If I do not receive the BitCoins, I will certainly send your video to all of your contacts including friends and family, colleagues, and so on. Nonetheless, if I receive the payment, I'll erase the recording right away. If you really want evidence, reply with Yup then I will send your video recording to your 6 contacts. It's a nonnegotiable offer, that being said please do not waste my personal time and yours by replying to this message.
Notice that except for your email address, all of the information
is vague, general and definitely not specific to you. Notice also
that he provides no proof or evidence of his claims. It's pretty
obvious that if you were to attempt to extort someone like this, you
would provide at least a brief clip of the video you claimed to have
to prove that you could follow through. This is an obvious sign of
the scam nature. Of course, if you don't visit porn websites,
then you would also obviously know immediately this is a scam.
Unless of course, you believe you watch porn in your sleep ("somnapornography"
While all of the claims are theoretically possible, it would take a pretty sophisticated scammer to achieve this. And a scammer like that is not going to target individuals; they'll go after corporations and bigger targets.
Some versions of the scam, like the one above, include one of the recipient's real passwords as "proof" that their claims are true. Criminals are sending emails and letters using their victims' authentic personally identifiable information to make their claims appear legitimate. How did they get your password? Most like they bought a list of usernames and passwords on the "dark web" from other hackers from a data breach like the ones you've heard about in the news: Experian, Yahoo, Wells Fargo, etc. Which means they are using a cut and paste program to send out thousands, or even millions of the scams.
First, do NOT reply to the scammer.
Do NOT pay the scammer.
Never send compromising images of yourself to anyone, no matter who they are or who they say they are.
Do not open attachments from people you do not know.
Turn off your electronic devices and web cameras - and cover or physically disconnect web cameras when you are not using them.
Report the scammer to Bitcoin (see below)
How To Report a Bitcoin Scam, Blackmail, Extortion or Theft:
Create a free account on Bitcoin (you need this to report a scam to them; it costs nothing and you don't need to give them any sensitive information; just an email address so they can get back to you)
Thenlogin on Bitcoin
Then click the "Report Scam" button on the page that comes up in step 3 (not here) (it looks like this: )
If you are receiving sextortion threats, you are not alone. The FBI says in many sextortion cases, the perpetrator is an adult pretending to be a teenager, and you are just one of the many victims being targeted by the same person. If you believe you're a victim of sextortion, or know someone else who is, the FBI wants to hear from you:
Contact your local FBI office (or toll-free at 1-800-CALL-FBI).
Next, the FBI recommends that if you have experienced this situation please notify the IC3 by filing a complaint.
If the email contains information that identifies you personally
(other than your email address alone; for example, address, complete name, etc.)
you should contact your local or state police and
local FBI office.
If you also forward a copy of the emails you receive here, we will examine them as well.
To see many other versions of the porn extortion scam, click here.
For a comprehensive list of national and international agencies to report scams, see this page.