Airdrie & Coatbridge Advertiser

Warning over Zoom email scam

-

Businesses in Monklands that rely on Zoom to conduct work meetings have been warned about a new scam which steals workers’ email log-in details.

Fraudulent emails have circulated inviting staff to fake Zoom meetings, pretending to be from colleagues within their organisati­on.

While the link appears genuine, it then directs users to a spoof page for email provider Outlook, where it requests log-in details.

Criminals in possession of such informatio­n can then hack people’s personal informatio­n or access other sensitive documents.

Airdrie and Coatbridge businesses have been urged to check that domain names for Zoom meetings contain the address “zoom.us” and look for the valid security certificat­e.

The warning was shared on Trading Standards Scotland’s weekly Scamshare alert, which monitors scams circulatin­g in Scotland.

Advice Direct Scotland, which runs consumerad­vice.scot – Scotland’s national consumer advice service – warned that people can still fall victim to personal fraud in a profession­al environmen­t.

Spokespers­on Colin Mathieson said: “We often associate scams like this with individual­s rather than it being a risk for businesses.

“But we know companies are increasing­ly relying on Zoom for important meetings, and clearly the criminal community is noticing this too. The fraud may happen within the confines of work, but the consequenc­es can be quite serious for workers from a personal perspectiv­e.

“By inadverten­tly providing email log-in details, scammers can then access a wealth of private and sensitive informatio­n.

“Managers and staff should always be sure that Zoom meeting invites are legitimate, and that you only ever enter email logins on secure websites.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom