Tuesday, February 10, 2009
Conficker worm sinks French navy network
The Conficker worm is a highly dangerous worm spreading through USB sticks or cameras when connected to a PC. A recent victim was the French navy, see this report. The Houston justice system was infected, computers at three London hospitals were infected. It is estimated that by the end of January 10 Million Windows PCs were infected. Conficker could possibly be activated at some point in the future to wreak havoc.
Friday, January 23, 2009
Google blocks this blog, because it thinks it's a virus??
Hmm, Google is getting wacky, blocking access to one of its own blogs, because it thinks it's dangerous???

Ok, this blog is about viruses etc., but it gives warnings, it doesn't spread them...
And even so, if Google blocks their blogs in their own site, does it mean www.blogger.com is infected?? Or did the ads from Google's very own adsense pose a threat?
Well, let's see this blog will ever be readable again at some point...

Ok, this blog is about viruses etc., but it gives warnings, it doesn't spread them...
And even so, if Google blocks their blogs in their own site, does it mean www.blogger.com is infected?? Or did the ads from Google's very own adsense pose a threat?
Well, let's see this blog will ever be readable again at some point...
Wednesday, December 17, 2008
The biggest pyramid scheme of them all... 50 Billion dollars gone
This is arguably the biggest con of all times: It is the pyramid scheme of former stock exchange chairman Bernard "Bernie" Madoff. Over 50 Billion U$ have disappeared, see these BBC reports: 1, 2.
The old adage holds true: If it's too good to be true, it's not true. This should be a wake-up call to all people investing into HYIPs, and other investments that promise high returns. These things are just plain fraud. In case of Madoff, he got away with it for so long, because he "only" offered 10% in return. But as can be seen, even in this case it was a scam.
The old adage holds true: If it's too good to be true, it's not true. This should be a wake-up call to all people investing into HYIPs, and other investments that promise high returns. These things are just plain fraud. In case of Madoff, he got away with it for so long, because he "only" offered 10% in return. But as can be seen, even in this case it was a scam.
Labels:
cheats,
fake investment opportunities,
fraud,
HYIP,
scams
Telephone and mobile phone SCAMS
Telephone and mobile phone scams are going around.
For example, you may get a phone call saying you won a cruise, and to claim your prize you have to press a number on your phone. This will pass you to a line for which you have to pay dearly - and no prize.
Or you get a short phone call (they don't really wait for you to answer) from some number (e.g., +88213229003) on your mobile. The hope is that you call back - for a hefty fee, of course. These 88213 calls are usually a scam. 88213 is a virtual country code to Telespazio S.p.A. in Italy, see this link. The 88213xxx callers try to lure you to call back, and you would have to pay quite a lot for it (e.g., 9 Euro/min). See also this list of suspicious numbers:
whocallsme.com
For example, you may get a phone call saying you won a cruise, and to claim your prize you have to press a number on your phone. This will pass you to a line for which you have to pay dearly - and no prize.
Or you get a short phone call (they don't really wait for you to answer) from some number (e.g., +88213229003) on your mobile. The hope is that you call back - for a hefty fee, of course. These 88213 calls are usually a scam. 88213 is a virtual country code to Telespazio S.p.A. in Italy, see this link. The 88213xxx callers try to lure you to call back, and you would have to pay quite a lot for it (e.g., 9 Euro/min). See also this list of suspicious numbers:
whocallsme.com
Thursday, November 13, 2008
Thousands of Columbians defrauded in pyramid scheme
Defrauded investors have rioted in several cities in Columbia. They were cheated out of their savings in a pyramid investment scheme, and now the crooks have closed shop, though some have been caught.
See the BBC News for the full report.
See the BBC News for the full report.
Labels:
cheats,
fake investment opportunities,
fraud,
HYIP,
scams
Monday, November 3, 2008
Trojan virus steals banking info
BBC reports that the Sinowal trojan has infected computers world-wide and stolen information for more than 270'000 bank accounts and 240'000 credit cards... Infections can happen simply by visiting a booby-trapped web site, and users wouldn't be aware of the infection.
Here is another report from the register.
Here is another report from the register.
Labels:
fraud,
internet hijacking,
phishing,
trojan,
virus warning
Crooks make $5m a year from fake Windows security software
Criminals can make as much as US$5 million a year by planting nearly-worthless security software on PCs, said Joe Stewart, director of malware research at SecureWorks Inc.
Read the full report.
Read the full report.
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