Email Scammers Try
New Bait in 'Vishing'
For Fresh Victims

By ANDREW LAVALLEE
July 17, 2006; Page B1

For some time, banks and credit-card companies have been warning 
computer users about so-called phishing emails that link to 
counterfeit Web sites where customers are asked to enter their 
account numbers and other personal information.

Now, savvy con artists are adding a new twist dubbed "vishing."

Customers of Santa Barbara Bank & Trust recently received emails 
telling them that their accounts with the company's online banking 
system had been disabled after the bank detected unauthorized access. 
They were told to dial a telephone number (with a local, Southern 
California area code) where an automated voice prompted them to enter 
their account numbers, personal-access codes and other details. It's 
not clear who was on the other end of the phone line, but it wasn't 
Santa Barbara Bank & Trust.

The incident was among the latest in a string of vishing, or voice 
phishing, attacks. Security experts say such schemes are made 
possible by Internet-telephone services, which allow computer users 
to quickly establish phone numbers, often without undergoing some of 
the verification checks used by traditional telephone companies. 
Also, Internet phone companies dole out numbers with a choice of area 
code, regardless of where in the country -- or world -- the user is 
located. That can make it much more difficult to locate fraudsters.

The Federal Bureau of Investigation said it has traced the Santa 
Barbara scheme to computers inside and outside the U.S., but so far 
hasn't made any arrests. The phone number has been deactivated. It is 
unclear whether any money was stolen.

...

http://online.wsj.com/public/article/SB115309244673308174-x2hR8RSpz6MIerq1fDIShcsPHQg_20070716.html



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