Home Depot Data Breach and the Scams That Follow
Posted: Wed Sep 24, 2014 1:52 pm
I'm sure you all are aware of the Home Depot data breach/loss.....
The scams were sure to follow and I had an email message that made it thru the SPAM filters this morning. At first glance, it looks pretty legit (Well, it would look legit if I had an AmEx card....and I don't)
Here's a couple of jpg files from screen captures:
[ATTACH]26258[/ATTACH]
[ATTACH]26259[/ATTACH]
The wording of the first paragraph is not quite right....not horrible like some scam messages I've seen, but still not quite right.
If I 'hover' the mouse over one of the hyper-links, I could see that they would link to a faked site....(still pretty clever in the way they did it)
[ATTACH]26260[/ATTACH]
All of the hyper-links in the message pointed to the same URL.....
Anyway, the point I'm trying to make is "Be careful out there" and "Look before you click". This is one example of the scams that are floating around. I did not, nor do I plan to, click on any of the links.
I did dig into the behind the scenes stuff on the message headers and what the links pointed to....
The email came from a server somewhere in Italy.
Awerikan Express lives in Chile.
They were able to spoof the mail headers enough for the message to make it thru all of the firewall/filter/SPAM-filters/etc. into my mailbox.
The scams were sure to follow and I had an email message that made it thru the SPAM filters this morning. At first glance, it looks pretty legit (Well, it would look legit if I had an AmEx card....and I don't)
Here's a couple of jpg files from screen captures:
[ATTACH]26258[/ATTACH]
[ATTACH]26259[/ATTACH]
The wording of the first paragraph is not quite right....not horrible like some scam messages I've seen, but still not quite right.
If I 'hover' the mouse over one of the hyper-links, I could see that they would link to a faked site....(still pretty clever in the way they did it)
[ATTACH]26260[/ATTACH]
All of the hyper-links in the message pointed to the same URL.....
Anyway, the point I'm trying to make is "Be careful out there" and "Look before you click". This is one example of the scams that are floating around. I did not, nor do I plan to, click on any of the links.
I did dig into the behind the scenes stuff on the message headers and what the links pointed to....
The email came from a server somewhere in Italy.
Awerikan Express lives in Chile.
They were able to spoof the mail headers enough for the message to make it thru all of the firewall/filter/SPAM-filters/etc. into my mailbox.