Cymraeg

Beware of Nepal earthquake scam appeals

April 27th 2015

Saturday's massive earthquake and the ensuing aftershock in Nepal has brought misery to thousands, with a rapidly mounting death and injury toll and many losing their homes. Natural catastrophes such as this always present heartless criminals with an ideal opportunity to release a wave of scams and malware related to the storm – appealing to people's genuine good nature.

For information and advice on spotting and dealing with spam and scam emails, click here
For information and advice on how to donate to charity safely online, click here

As always seems to be the case in such circumstances, we are anticpating a flood of emails, websites and social media activity claiming either to have exclusive video or pleading for donations for disaster relief efforts.

Some such messages will include malicious code designed to infect computers with viruses, spyware, or Trojan horses.

Others will be fraudulent appeals for charitable donations. After hurricanes Katrina and Rita hit the Gulf Coast in 2005, the FBI, Justice Department and Federal Trade Commission had to form a task force to battle the massive volume of scams that accompanied them. The American Red Cross reported at least 15 fake websites impersonating legitimate Red Cross appeals for donations to relief efforts. These were actually phishing attacks, directing users to a malicious server that collected credit card numbers, PayPal passwords and other personal information.  That was ten years ago, and the problem has increased massively with the rise in cybercrime.

If you decide to donate to relief to helop the victims of the Nepalese earthquake, make sure you do so directly to reputable charitable organisations. Make sure you know the charity's physical address and phone number. And do not respond to any unsolicited emails.

By Get Safe Online

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