![]() ![]() ![]() The phone number in the message was the same as the one showed up as the caller’s number. If you do not call us back, or we do not hear from your solicitor either, then get ready to face the legal consequences. I repeat, it is: 020X YYY ZZZZ.ĭo not disregard this message, and call us back. The hotline to my division is: 020X YYY ZZZZ. ![]() This is officer Dennis Grey from HM Revenue and Customs. This scam was a synthetic voice that said, in tones best described as polite but not gentle: We don’t know whether the crooks deliberately timed their vishing to overlap with this official email blast or not, or if it was a coincidence. Interestingly, the tax office in the UK, known as HMRC ( Her Majesty’s Revenue and Customs), recently emailed millions of taxpayers with a genuine – and, admittedly, unsuspicious – message to remind taxpayers all that there were just 100 days left until the cutoff for 2019/2020 electronic tax filing. The latest batch of automated vishing that's been reported to us claims to related to taxes and taxation, a theme that the crooks have been exploiting for years. To cancel your subscription or to discuss this renewal, press 1 now. Your Amazon Prime subscription will auto-renew. For further information or to cancel the order, press 1 now to speak to an operator. Your will soon be dispatched and you should receive it in of days. Your Amazon order for has now been processed. The vishing scams we wrote about back then concentrated on home deliveries, something that’s important in the lifestyles of many of us these days, thanks to restrictions on movement due to coronavirus concerns: Vishing scams use Amazon and Prime as lures – don’t get caught! We last wrote about vishing back in September 2020, when we and other Naked Security readers in the UK began receiving a burst of automated, unwanted voice calls that were clearly designed to get our attention whether we answered them live or listened to them later via voicemail. There are still plenty of even older-school crooks who use a scamming technique called vishing, short for voice phishing. (Watch directly on YouTube if the video won’t play here.) That’s why we’ve regularly written this year about SMS smishing campaigns that take these short, sharp and simple business messages and turn them into lures that trick you into clicking links or texting back, whereupon you get sucked into the scammers’ grasping tentacles. If all the company needs to do is say, “Your one-time login code is 314159” or “We couldn’t get hold of you, click here for more”, an SMS is simple, fast, needs no internet coverage, and will reach you even if your phone is out of credit. You probably use SMSes only very sparingly to talk to your friends these days – IM software such as WhatsApp, Facebook Messenger, WeChat, Signal and Snapchat now dominate the personal messaging marketplace.īut plenty of businesses still use SMS for contacting customers, on the grounds that pretty much every mobile phone in the world can receive text messages – regardless of what other IM software may or may not be installed. You’ve almost certainly heard of smishing, which is phishing conducted via SMS or text message. Phishing tricks – the Top Ten Treacheries of 2020īut this sort of crime isn’t only conducted by email, which is why we have a range of words that sound like “phishing” but refer to other channels of communication. ![]()
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