[Nfbf-l] {Spam?} Beware All Who Have Medicare! Increasing amounts of phishing and malware-infected emails

Kathy Davis kdavisnfbf at cfl.rr.com
Mon Oct 13 05:27:54 UTC 2014


Dear Alan,
	This is a most excellent e-mail. In actuality I have been receiving
several Medicare related e-mails wanting me to get back with them.
Thankfully I had the good sense to ignore and delete them. I truthfully
wasn't sure if they were bogus or not. The article you sent was most
informative and I appreciate the many excellent e-mails you send out. 

God's blessings always,

Kathy Davis


-----Original Message-----
From: Nfbf-l [mailto:nfbf-l-bounces at nfbnet.org] On Behalf Of Alan Dicey via
Nfbf-l
Sent: Sunday, October 12, 2014 9:04 PM
To: NFB Florida List Group
Subject: [Nfbf-l] {Spam?} Beware All Who Have Medicare! Increasing amounts
of phishing and malware-infected emails

Dear Friends,
I found this on a web site, and thought, since so many of us have Social
Security Retirement Income, or Social Security Disibility Income (SSDI), and
therefore Medicare, with the advent of the Medicare open enrollment period
starting in just a few days, there are increasing amounts of phishing and
malware-infected emails circulating, and this article would surely be worth
sharing.
With Best Regards,
God Bless,
Alan
Plantation, Florida
 Please join me on
www.nfblive.org
where through learning, friendship, activities, and growth, together "we can
live the life we want."

Beware All Who Have Medicare!
Posted on October 12, 2014 by abletec
Please Share

Medicare open enrollment begins on October 15, 2014 and extends through
December 7, 2014.
Over the past few months, I've noticed a decidedly increasing number of
emails purporting to be from Medicare premium providers and/or their
representatives, which has increased to a veritable steady stream toward the
end of September and beginning of October. I expect the amount to remain
constant or actually increase somewhat till the period of open enrollment
ends.
So Why Do Spammers Send these?
There is 1 basic reason these emails are being sent: . . .. money.
So how do the spammers actually get money?
That can happen in several ways.
1) They create a very official-looking website that requests various pieces
of information in order for you to sign up for a Medicare plan. Such
information may include:
name,
address,
date of birth,
email, and
possibly even a social security number.
They'll also ask you to create a username and password, which they're
betting you use on more than 1 site (but you wouldn't do that, right?). If
you do, and if your email has a web interface (and what email doesn't these
days?), they could potentially try signing into your email account and
determine which financial institutions you do business with if you bank
online. From there, it's a simple matter for them to log into your online
banking if you use the same password there, or to request a password reset
if you don't. They may even change your email password, thereby locking you
out of your email account while they log in to your bank and steal your
money.
2) They can sell the information gained from you to criminals in underground
forums, who in turn use it to commit identity and/or financial theft.
3) Their very official-looking website can be poisoned with malware. Once
infected, your computer could be redirected to various websites in order to
click on advertisements, and the spammers get paid for each click that
occurs. Or, the computer could be used as part of a "distributed denial of
service" (DDOS) attack. In these attacks, computers are formed into networks
called "botnets", which are under the control of the criminals' 
command-and-control server. Each individual computer in a botnet is called a
"zombie".
These botnets can then be used to flood legitimate websites, such as
government or financial institutions with so much traffic that it makes the
website unusable by legitimate visitors.
So, in essence, your computer is helping criminals do their dirty deeds.
The requesting of personal information with criminal intent is called
"phishing".
So how do you protect yourself?
The first rule is not to click on any email links you receive. If you wish
to go to a link, type the link directly into your web browser. So, to go to
the Medicare site, for example, type:
www.medicare.gov
Also note that legitimate sites will never contact you via email requesting
information such as passwords, usernames, and social security numbers.
Another thing you can do to see where the email link points to is to
right-click the link and select 'Copy Link Location' from the context menu
that appears. In one of the latest spams I received, this is what came up:
falconbeakedjaculationgz.com/kKfa2gTCalk4AaUWSKv-lfG1MpU&sa=D&sntz=1&usg=AFQ
jCNF3CWaHd-DRqtYQEonewXw5tO0D9A
That truly looks like something that would direct to a Medicare-related
site, doesn't it? (NOT!)! (
note: the http prefix was eliminated so that the link could not be clicked).
Another thing to do is to look at the 'From"' field of your email address.
In this case, the idiot wasn't even sophisticated enough to try to make you
think it was coming from some sort of Medicare site-the address was simply
help47ka at falconbeakedjaculationgz dot com Again note that I've changed
the email address so as to not allow it to be clicked.
My suggestion is that if you're looking to change your Medicare options, or
even just explore those available to you, start by going to:
www.medicare.gov
Whatever you do, don't clikc on just any links you receive in emails!

Please Share
I received this information from:

Brighter Vision Technologies

Where Visionaries & Technology Unite for Good

http://brighter-vision.com/2014/10/12/beware-all-who-have-medicare/ 


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-----
No virus found in this message.
Checked by AVG - www.avg.com
Version: 2015.0.5315 / Virus Database: 4181/8376 - Release Date: 10/12/14

-----
No virus found in this message.
Checked by AVG - www.avg.com
Version: 2015.0.5315 / Virus Database: 4181/8375 - Release Date: 10/12/14





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