The Gold Coast Bulletin

Don’t reply to this ‘ATO’ FB post

- ELLEN RANSLEY

A NEW “insidious” scam is duping honest Australian taxpayers out of cash and their personal informatio­n online.

Fraudsters are impersonat­ing the Australian Tax Office on Twitter, Facebook and other social media platforms.

The scam operates by scanning public conversati­ons on social media, where taxpayers ask questions of – or make complaints about – the ATO.

The scammers then hijack the conversati­on using a fake ATO profile, contacting the original poster directly with an offer to help and after earning their trust, asking them to click on a link or provide personal details.

Assistant Treasurer and Financial Services Minister Stephen Jones said community awareness was the best defence, and urged taxpayers to be careful with who they interact with online.

“A pretty good sign (of it being a scam account is) if they’ve joined recently,” he told ABC Radio.

“The tax office has had a social media presence for almost as long as Facebook has existed, for example. If somebody’s pretending to be the tax office and they only joined in October last year, that’s a pretty good indication that it’s a fake.

“And individual tax office employees won’t use a Facebook profile to contact somebody.

“In fact, no government agency contacts and asks for informatio­n over social media. They’ll use a secure portal to do all of that and they’ll never ask you to directly upload your informatio­n by clicking a link.”

Mr Jones said the ATO is working with social media platforms and other government agencies to remove these “damaging interactio­ns”.

 ?? ?? Assistant Treasurer and Minister for Financial Services Stephen Jones.
Assistant Treasurer and Minister for Financial Services Stephen Jones.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia