Thursday, October 24, 2024

Tips to avoid being scammed on Facebook

September 7, 2011 by  
Filed under Choosing Lingerie


By Susan Salisbury

A frantic e-mail message that said Jupiter real estate broker Marilyn Martens
was at a London hotel with her family and had been mugged at gunpoint went
out to all her contacts.

“I write this with tears in my eyes,” the email supposedly sent by
Martens in late August began. Martens needed money to pay her hotel bill,
and the embassy and the police would not help, it said.

Martens was of course, not really in England, but was going about her business
in Jupiter. A client who had received the email phoned her and said, “I
think you have been hacked.”

“My phone was ringing off the hook with people asking, “Are you in
England?” Martens said.

“My Facebook account was hacked. They were able to get into my AOL
account,” Martens said.

Unfortunately, one client out of the several hundred who received the e-mail
wired $1,550 to the scammers through Western Union, Martens said. The money
is gone.

“People need to know this is going on,” Martens said.

When Martens went into her Facebook account and changed her password she
discovered all her email contacts’ addresses were gone, as was all her new
mail. She contacted AOL, which helped her get the addresses back, and she
now has tighter security settings.

After the man sent the money to the scammers, he received a second e-mail
thanking him that said $2,000 more was needed. At that point he realized he
had been taken.

Facebook has just published A Guide to Facebook Security, available
free on its website. Here are the top tips to protect your Facebook account:

  • Only friend people you know.
  • Create a strong password and use it only for Facebook.
  • Don’t share your password.
  • Change your password on a regular basis.
  • Share your personal information only with people and companies that need it.
  • Log into Facebook only once each session. If it looks like Facebook is asking
    you to log in a second time, skip the links and directly type www.facebook.com
    into your browser address bar.
  • Use a one-time password when using someone else’s computer.
  • Log out of Facebook after using someone else’s computer.
  • Use secure browsing whenever possible.
  • Only download applications from sites you trust.
  • Keep your anti-virus software updated.
  • Keep your browser and other applications up to date.
  • Don’t paste script (code) in your browser address bar.
  • Use browser add-ons like Web of Trust and Firefox’s NoScript to keep your
    account from being hijacked.
  • Beware of “goofy” posts from anyone – even friends. If it looks like
    something your friend wouldn’t post, don’t click on it.
  • Scammers might hack your friends’ accounts and send links from their accounts.
    Beware of enticing links coming from your friends.

To file a complaint

To file a complaint about an Internet crime scheme, go to www.ic3.gov.
The Internet Crime Complaint Center is a partnership between the Federal
Bureau of Investigation, the National White Collar Crime Center and the
Bureau of Justice Assistance.

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