The Cost Of Responding To Lame Phishing Attempts

from the got-to-respond dept

Odd timing on this one. I literally had just received a scam email, claiming to be from the FBI, saying that my IP had been logged on 30 different illegal websites, and demanding (with an exclamation point!) that I answer the attached questions. I laughed at this rather lame attempt at either phishing or passing on some kind of malware, deleted it and went back to work… where the first thing I saw was a warning from the FBI saying that these things are going around and they’re not at all real. This raises one of the annoying costs not often discussed when it comes to these types of phishing attacks: the effort the original company or organization has to make to assure everyone they’re not really involved. The problem is, while most folks around here would recognize such an email immediately as a scam — there are plenty who wouldn’t. Thus, the FBI has to waste time coming out with a response to it and getting the news spread widely.


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Comments on “The Cost Of Responding To Lame Phishing Attempts”

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7 Comments
Mike (profile) says:

Re: That raises the question ...

That raises the question, though. I don’t recall seeing a warning from the FBI, nor have I heard of one. Not saying everything that happens crosses my desk … but how is it that you got a phishing email, then a warning from the FBI?

The story was picked up by plenty of news organizations. Since a big part of my job is reading the news, I saw it as I was reading the headlines.

STJ says:

No Subject Given

I work for an online money transaction company and litterally talk to 30 people per day who call in saying they get these e-mails. I have about 2 a day who respond and give up their information they have with us and 1 person who gives up everything(SSN, credit card, bank account). Of course, after they hit the submit key, they realize it wasn’t us.. Yea, right.

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