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Email banking scam alert 09:31 - Dec 14 with 5169 viewsSuggers

All,

Aware of a new fishing email banking scam doing the rounds. Obviously most IT literate folk know you should never click a link on an email purported to be from your bank, however there are some who still do.

They maybe older people, or those not familiar with the regular business bulletins you get alerting you to these kind of scams, so please make sure you remind those less IT literate folk, who may be more gullible thank yourself, not to be taken in by these scammers.
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Email banking scam alert on 09:47 - Dec 14 with 5100 viewsRAFCBLUE

Sadly, this is the world we live in, particularly when fraudsters can't physically intercept you so they now frequent the online world looking usually for important people to imitate and then con innocent victims out of their electronic savings which is the equivalent of the 1970's mugging in the street.

Most of the time (95%+) the victim has actually given their details away - usually because of poor IT behaviours such as insecure passwords.

Some good advice of things to follow is here:
What to do if I think I have given a fraudster my bank details
https://www.which.co.uk/consumer-rights/advice/i-think-i-may-have-given-a-frauds

HOWEVER, banks are increasingly wise to this and frustratingly in 8 out of 10 cases now don't pay out, particularly if you are responsible for leaking your own details and there is no chance of compensation.

https://www.which.co.uk/news/2021/11/banks-wrongly-denying-fraud-victims-compens

George Bernard Shaw had it right: "He who can does; he who cannot, teaches." https://www.visittheusa.co.uk/
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Email banking scam alert on 09:52 - Dec 14 with 5082 viewsBoss_Hog

These scams are often run by Organised Crime Gangs (OCG) so beware not to give out your bank details to them under any circumstances. Even if they appear to be rewarding you financially for something, be careful to know who you are dealing with.
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Email banking scam alert on 10:16 - Dec 14 with 5024 viewspioneer

Email banking scam alert on 09:52 - Dec 14 by Boss_Hog

These scams are often run by Organised Crime Gangs (OCG) so beware not to give out your bank details to them under any circumstances. Even if they appear to be rewarding you financially for something, be careful to know who you are dealing with.


All very true sadly.

The other important message is if at any time youthink you might have been or are being scammed dont wait to confirm….ring your bank straightaway. Better to make a bit of a fool of yourself getting them to find out you havent been scammed than leaving it until you know for sure and they have cleared you out.

I am at an age where i have so much trouble remembering my bank details it forms an additional level of security for me.
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Email banking scam alert on 10:19 - Dec 14 with 5006 viewskel

Awful that this happens so close to Christmas. Some people have no shame at all.
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Email banking scam alert on 12:57 - Dec 14 with 4776 viewsRAFCBLUE

Email banking scam alert on 10:19 - Dec 14 by kel

Awful that this happens so close to Christmas. Some people have no shame at all.




Always check the FCA's financial services register!

George Bernard Shaw had it right: "He who can does; he who cannot, teaches." https://www.visittheusa.co.uk/
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Email banking scam alert on 14:54 - Dec 14 with 4651 viewsArthurDaley

I keep getting e mails for Aldi offering me Christmas vouchers . Damm i never shop in Aldi.

A large VAT Dave

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Email banking scam alert on 15:08 - Dec 14 with 4639 viewslove_the_dale

Email banking scam alert on 10:16 - Dec 14 by pioneer

All very true sadly.

The other important message is if at any time youthink you might have been or are being scammed dont wait to confirm….ring your bank straightaway. Better to make a bit of a fool of yourself getting them to find out you havent been scammed than leaving it until you know for sure and they have cleared you out.

I am at an age where i have so much trouble remembering my bank details it forms an additional level of security for me.


Good advice, but something rung a bell with "straightaway", which prompted me to find the following from https://www.nidirect.gov.uk/articles/phone-scams-and-cold-calls -

"You should wait for 20 minutes before you call your bank on a trusted phone number to check it out. This is because scammers are able to keep phone lines open. Whilst you think you are making a new phone call, the line is still open to the scammer who pretends to be a different person from your bank or the police. If possible, use a different phone or call somebody else in the meantime."
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Email banking scam alert on 20:00 - Dec 14 with 4345 viewspioneer

Email banking scam alert on 15:08 - Dec 14 by love_the_dale

Good advice, but something rung a bell with "straightaway", which prompted me to find the following from https://www.nidirect.gov.uk/articles/phone-scams-and-cold-calls -

"You should wait for 20 minutes before you call your bank on a trusted phone number to check it out. This is because scammers are able to keep phone lines open. Whilst you think you are making a new phone call, the line is still open to the scammer who pretends to be a different person from your bank or the police. If possible, use a different phone or call somebody else in the meantime."


I didnt know that…thanks for the warning and advice. On the two occasions I have had to call my bankI have used a different phone, but opportunistically as opposed to for the reasons you point out.
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Email banking scam alert on 20:58 - Dec 14 with 4280 viewsRAFCBLUE

The other one to watch out for are these spurious Whatsapp groups that people add you to or invite you to or that you join with good intentions but where you don't know all the participants.

Some of these Whatsapp groups have over 100 participants and it only takes one infiltrator who then has 100 names, phone numbers etc.

You wouldn't wave your bank card under the nose of 100 strangers yet people do it without realising!

This is a really good article on the dangers of Whatsapp and how to protect yourself:

https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/why-do-you-need-protect-your-whatsapp-account-aga

George Bernard Shaw had it right: "He who can does; he who cannot, teaches." https://www.visittheusa.co.uk/
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Email banking scam alert on 11:43 - Dec 15 with 4033 viewsfinberty

A couple of years ago, my late father fell for the telephone scams that are the other way of separating people from their own money.

By chance, an engineer working on behalf of RMBC was at his house installing an emergency contact system which would sense if Dad fell and hurt himself, and would alert the monitoring team if needed.

As the engineer was connecting everything together, he could overhear my Dad reading out his bank details over the phone. The engineer stepped across to him, took the receiver from him, told the caller that the call was hereby terminated and hung up, ensuring the line became cleared.

That single simple act spared my father the anguish of seeing his funds drain away.

I do not know the identity of that engineer. I wish I did, because his awareness saved the day and I would have wanted to thank him.
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