See: http://zulu.zscaler.com/submission/show/411670dc057664e90c5aa05e0f54ecdd-1340691340
Various PHISH on that IP response now dead, this one still alive. Has been there since 2012-06-26 03:27:32
polonus
See: http://zulu.zscaler.com/submission/show/411670dc057664e90c5aa05e0f54ecdd-1340691340
Various PHISH on that IP response now dead, this one still alive. Has been there since 2012-06-26 03:27:32
polonus
Scan of the HTML
Well as cybercrime now has more facets than just the common malware like trojans, viruses and worms, etc.
We have to be alerted to their new criminal money making schemes.
Fraud in many forms is one of their strategies.
And if you do not pay attention, you could be their next victim.
Remember banks never send mails and do not open phishing websites or links.
So check your links and mind your clicks, fraudsters are after your money…
Info about recent scams and place to report: http://www.fraudwatchers.org/
polonus
That is where common sense comes in. If you get an email asking for personal information, and it gives you a link to your “bank website” for example, NEVER enter your personal information and ALWAYS look at where you are at in your URL bar. ;D
Hi true indian,
Then this is the article to read - Identifying Obvious Scammers & Their Websites
: http://www.fraudwatchers.org/forums/view.php?pg=fw_scamsite (author = Mysteryquest)
Mind you, scam detecting guidelines do not make you an expert,
if you still unsure, ask first about website, contact information, source.
“Do not take “candy” from strangers or react to strange requests!”,
polonus
Hi Pol,
Customer information are sent to an “offensive IP database”,specifically 174.123.110.26
Infromation about this IP can be found here :
http://www.bizimbal.com/odb/details.html?id=784813
Also found @ Clean-MX :
http://support.clean-mx.de/clean-mx/viruses.php?sort=firstseen%20desc&review=174.123.110.26
Hi Left123,
Thanks for the bizimbal link, and the additional info.
Always good as a heads-up for those interested in this thread,
polonus