COMMON TYPES OF EMAIL SCAMS
• 419 Emails: You are offered a share in a large sum of money in return for helping to transfer it out of the country. Once you have given the criminals your bank account details, they empty your accounts.
• Phishing: An email that purports to be from companies such as banks designed to trick you into revealing your personal information and passwords. REMEMBER: your bank will NEVER contact you out of the blue to ask for your PIN, full password or to move money to another account.
• Pharming: Pharming is a term used when you are directed from a link in an email to a website that spoofs a legitimate website in order to access your personal details.
HOW TO SPOT A SCAM EMAIL
• Impersonation of UK official websites: For example HMRC, with an email message claiming you are due a refund and requesting your bank account details or directing you to a website link.
• Impersonation of UK officials: Criminals impersonate a UK official to obtain personal information and steal money, often claiming that you are due a refund or must make an urgent payment. Examples of this scam include TV License, the HMRC Tax Rebate and the Council Tax Scam.
• Investment scams and pension scams: Emailed offers of worthless, overpriced
or non-existent shares, or a time-limited opportunity to convert some or all of your pension pot into cash. Click here to find out more about these.
• The sender's email address looks suspicious. Roll your mouse pointer over the sender's name to check it. If it doesn't match the website address of the organisation it says it's from it could be a sign of a scam.
• The email doesn't use your name – it says something like 'Dear customer' instead.
• There's a sense of urgency, asking you to act immediately.
• There's a prominent website link that may look at first glance like the proper address but has one letter missing or is spelt wrong.
• There's a request for personal information.
• Poor grammar and spelling mistakes.
• The entire text of the email is contained within an image rather than the usual text format, and the image contains an embedded hyperlink to a bogus site. Again, roll your mouse pointer over the link to reveal its true destination. But don't click it!
• 419 Emails: You are offered a share in a large sum of money in return for helping to transfer it out of the country. Once you have given the criminals your bank account details, they empty your accounts.
• Phishing: An email that purports to be from companies such as banks designed to trick you into revealing your personal information and passwords. REMEMBER: your bank will NEVER contact you out of the blue to ask for your PIN, full password or to move money to another account.
• Pharming: Pharming is a term used when you are directed from a link in an email to a website that spoofs a legitimate website in order to access your personal details.
HOW TO SPOT A SCAM EMAIL
• Impersonation of UK official websites: For example HMRC, with an email message claiming you are due a refund and requesting your bank account details or directing you to a website link.
• Impersonation of UK officials: Criminals impersonate a UK official to obtain personal information and steal money, often claiming that you are due a refund or must make an urgent payment. Examples of this scam include TV License, the HMRC Tax Rebate and the Council Tax Scam.
• Investment scams and pension scams: Emailed offers of worthless, overpriced
or non-existent shares, or a time-limited opportunity to convert some or all of your pension pot into cash. Click here to find out more about these.
• The sender's email address looks suspicious. Roll your mouse pointer over the sender's name to check it. If it doesn't match the website address of the organisation it says it's from it could be a sign of a scam.
• The email doesn't use your name – it says something like 'Dear customer' instead.
• There's a sense of urgency, asking you to act immediately.
• There's a prominent website link that may look at first glance like the proper address but has one letter missing or is spelt wrong.
• There's a request for personal information.
• Poor grammar and spelling mistakes.
• The entire text of the email is contained within an image rather than the usual text format, and the image contains an embedded hyperlink to a bogus site. Again, roll your mouse pointer over the link to reveal its true destination. But don't click it!