Saturday, January 10, 2015
 
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Scam Alert
Fake emails from Gmail carry Malware

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[January 10, 2015]  Have a Gmail account? Watch out for scam emails posing as messages from Google. They may look like official notices about your account, but they carry malware.

How the Scam Works:

You receive an email that appears to be a message about your Google or Gmail account. One version of this scam informs you that "You have exceeded your email limit quota." Another tells you that "you have a deferred email." The text is hyperlinked in both, implying that you should click for more information. Don't do it!

Clicking on the link will download malware to your computer. Once on your machine, it can hunt through your files for personal and banking information. This opens you up to the possibility of ID theft.

These scam emails are particularly tricky because they look so real. They have details like Google's address in the footer. One version actually has a link to "unsubscribe" and "change my notification settings." Be sure not to click these links because they also may contain malware.

How to Spot a Scam Email:

1. Check out the "From" field: Scammers have the ability to mask email addresses, making the message appear to come from a legitimate source. But they don't always use it. In this scam, the "Google" emails aren't actually from a @google.com address.

2. Watch for typos, strange phrasing and bad grammar. Scammers can easily copy a brand's logo and email format, but awkward wording and poor grammar are typically a give away that the message is a scam. In the example above, the phrases "limit quota" and "deferred email" are a sign that something's not right.

3. Hover over URLs to reveal their true destination. Typically, the hyperlinked text will say one thing, but the link will point somewhere else. Scammers either set up fake websites or hack into third-party sites and use them to host malware.

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4. Watch for look alike URLs. Be wary of sites that have the brand name as a subdomain of another URL (i.e. brandname.scamwebsite.com) or part of a longer URL (i.e. companyname customersupport.com).

ABOUT BBB:
For 100 years, the Better Business Bureau has been helping consumers find businesses, brands and charities they can trust. In 2012, consumers turned to BBB more than 100 million times for Business Reviews on more than 4 million companies and Charity Reports on 11,000 charities, all available for free at www.bbb.org. The Council of Better Business Bureaus is the umbrella organization for 114 local, independent BBB's across the United States and Canada, as well as home to its national programs on dispute resolution and industry self-regulation.

[Alyssa Hoerr, Better Business Bureau]

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