“The hacker sends them the email as if they’re involved with the help office as part of the university or the funding source,” Levin said.Students can then make the error of clicking on a phony link and typing in their loan User ID and password. “So the hacker then takes their information to
log onto the real website and change the banking info so the cash is directed to a pre-paid debit card instead of a legitimate banking account of the student,”Levin said.The next hack gets fraudsters into checking account by diverting
employees ‘direct deposits.”You get an email from what you believe is your employer or your payroll business. That leads you to go to this protected website where you do your payroll transaction,”Levin said.The FBI cautions legitimate payrolls websites like this are being spoofed.” They take your details and go to the proper site, alter your banking info, “Levin said.This means that the
next time an employee earns money, the fraudster gets paid instead.Here’s the big takeaway: Don’t recycle IDs and passwords. Hackers prosper primarily since victims use the exact same user ID and passwords for whatever. So utilize various ones, and alter them frequently.Never click emailed links. Fake sites look precisely like the genuine offer. Instead, go to the site straight, and cut out a possible scam, the intermediary. ———- SHARE YOUR STORY Do you have a problem with a business that you have not had the ability to resolve? If so, 7 In your corner wishes to help you! Send us your concerns, issues, and story ideas
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