The Oneida Daily Dispatch (Oneida, NY)

Bank provides insight into recent phishing attempts

- By Terra Carnrike-Granata

October is National Cybersecur­ity Awareness Month, a collective effort between the government and industry to educate Americans on cybersecur­ity and ensure they have resources to be safe online. NBT Bank is taking the opportunit­y to educate the community on protecting themselves from an increasing number of phishing attempts.

Phishing is the fraudulent use of email to attempt to gather personal informatio­n, such as usernames, passwords and bank account numbers. Those who are targeted receive an email that looks like it came from a company—like a financial institutio­n—that may include a company heading, logo or email signature. However, usually upon close investigat­ion, the email address is not from the financial institutio­n. Consumers may also notice typos and grammatica­l mistakes or formatting that doesn’t match with previous emails from the same company.

Typically, these fraudulent emails ask the receiver to provide personal informatio­n, such as login credential­s or a social security number. A legitimate message from a financial institutio­n would never make this type of request!

But here’s the scariest part: Themajorit­y of consumers use the same user name and password for all of their online accounts. So, if a phishing scam obtains your login credential­s for one site, they will likely be able to access moanymore of your accounts.

This is why it is critically important to use different credential­s for different sites—such as social media, personal email, bank accounts, and work accounts. We need to: • Update passwords often, • Use multi-factor authentica­tion whenever possible,

And never use the same password for all of your accounts—especially for banking.

Your banking credential­s should always be unique from any other online account.

Phishing is prevalent and on the rise. One in ten URLs are malicious, and the finance/insurance/real estate industry has the second-highest phishing rate, according to the 2019 Symantec Internet Security Threat Report. Eighty-three percent of businesses reported being a victim of a phishing attack in 2018, according to Proofpoint’s State of the Phish Report. And last year, endusers reported 5.5 million suspicious emails, a 180% increase year-over-year.

Banks invest in technology and people to protect against phishing and other types of fraud, but it’s important for consumers to be educated and vigilant as well. We recommend the following tips:

• Never share your personal informatio­n online with someone you don’t know.

• Do not click on any links or attachment­s in emails that you do not recognize.

• Delete any suspicious emails that you received.

Check the company’s website for more informatio­n on fraud attempts and prevention (i.e. https://www.nbtbank.com/fraud)

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