Manila Bulletin

Cyber criminals getting smarter; don’t fall for scams disguised as legitimate ads

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Cyber criminals are getting smarter and scams are now looking like legitimate ads in social media and mobile phone messages. This warning can’t be said too many times and it’s best to keep them in your mind while you are scanning social media or replying to a text message.

In the past few days alone, several news stories reported on online scams which caused much anxiety, financial losses, and even a threat to national security. The reason why these fraudulent messages still find victims is because cyber criminals have found ways to package them to look and sound like real messages or advertisem­ents from legitimate sources.

How do they do it? One, by using a website address that mimics a real domain’s name so that when a reader checks, it appears to be a legitimate address. Two, by the use of well-crafted words to entice and promise some reward, like a job that offers a big compensati­on package. And more recently, with the use of a device to deceive mobile phones into connecting to them instead of legitimate cell network towers, enabling attackers to intercept communicat­ions and then send fraudulent messages which will appear as coming from a well-known trade name.

The sophistica­ted ways of cybercrime to victimize people are not only worrisome but threatenin­g to our way of life. Here we are now deep into a digitized world where convenienc­e and efficiency give more time for productive endeavors, and there they are, brilliant minds choosing to channel their creativity to scam people.

Recently, the Anti-cybercrime Group of the Philippine National Police (ACG-PNP) arrested a man who tricked a minor into sending nude photos by offering a modeling job, and later used the photos to blackmail the sender. The authoritie­s warned against social media users posing as modeling and fashion agents.

The Armed Forces of the Philippine­s is now investigat­ing online platforms – recently deactivate­d –for recruiting former and active Filipino soldiers as military consultant­s. The domain cited in social media had mimicked a legitimate domain based in the US, whose official had already denied any links to the fraudulent address. According to AFP spokespers­on Col. Francel Margareth Padilla, the investigat­ion on the matter is ongoing.

There are also messages from known trademarks that appear on mobile phones. Manila Bulletin’s Senior Technology Editor Art Samaniego, who also heads the MB component in the Smartwatch­ph initiative to fight online crime, explained this sophistica­ted process. “It involves tricking the mobile phones to connect to a fake mobile base station, instead of the legitimate network tower. This exploits the vulnerabil­ity in the 2G (second-generation cellular technology) network to impersonat­e legitimate message senders.”

The only way not to fall victim to these messages promising something – cheaper merchandis­e, high paying jobs or consultanc­y work, even travel – is to be very vigilant. Before replying to a company in social media or through a mobile phone, do not only check the source. Yes, it will likely look like a credible source because of the familiar trade name and the well-crafted message. But trust the old saying – When it sounds too good to be true, then it is not true!

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