
Then there is the advance fee fraud, popularly known as the lottery scam. These are mails, often attributed to companies like Yahoo and Microsoft, claiming you have won an obscene amount of money, and asking for an advance fee so that they can transfer the lottery amount in your name. Well, the world is not such a simple place.
So how do you protect yourself?
We are always in a hurry, the world demands us to be that way. It is this sense of urgency that the scamsters want to exploit, they want you to respond immediately without thinking. A phishing mail can even go to the extent of saying that if you do not take action in the next 24 hours your account will be frozen. Just stay calm. Call your bank/vendor and make sure they have asked for this information. If they say they have not sent any mail, just delete it.
But there are a few other things you should do. First get the latest version of an antivirus and Internet security suite— please don’t buy a pirated CD. Download/buy original software from www.symantec.com, for Norton Antivirus, or www.avg.com for AVG. These software have anti-phishing filters built in, and will alert you the moment it detects phishing. This is one good reason you should have a legal antivirus, a legal genuine software, and the latest patches.
If you don’t want to spend money, get yourself either the latest version of Internet Explorer from www.microsoft.com or download the latest version of Firefox from www.mozilla.com
—both have an internal anti-phishing engine built in to alert you when you are on a site that steals data. However, the most important prevention is not to take a rash decision, or answer to the e-mails in a hurry.
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