Why you have to keep an eye on web links
I received the following text recently: “We have identified an unusual login
attempt on your online banking. Log in via the secure link to avoid account
suspension – www.iamaspammer.com”
Oh
no – someone’s got into my account.
Yeah,
right. But had I followed the (secure?) link to the website given, I would
undoubtedly have found someone HAD accessed my online banking.
This
sort of text makes me equally sad and mad.
Mad
because there are increasing numbers of low-lifers out there trying to tempt
the unwary to give away, unwittingly, their personal details.
And
sad because there is no doubt that a few of the squillions of people sent this
text would have followed the link.
Not
because they are plain stupid but because the link started with the name of my
bank. The rest of the url was clearly not genuine.
So,
another timely reminder to my reader to take care with texts or emails. If in
any doubt, ignore the message and call your bank on a number that you trust and
that you know is right.
It will cost £110 to kit yourself out in the new England football
strip in readiness for the World Cup in Russia, which starts in June. That
works at a fraction over £35 a match. Bargain.