doohickey for the tengai?
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- Posts: 1578
- Joined: Thu Aug 16, 2001 8:18 am
nklr - paypal users watch for this scam
For those of you with PayPal accounts out there, here's some info on
a new type of internet scam using a fake PayPal email and web site.
__Arden
A new Web site spoofs the PayPal online payment site and attempts to
trick PayPal customers into divulging sensitive account and billing
information. The fake Web site is the latest example in what security
experts say is a rising trend of "brand spoofing" scams.
PayPal customers are directed to the site, www.paypal-
billingnetwork.net, by an e-mail message that appears to come from
the Mountain View, Calif., company. The message claims that due to
a "recent system flush," the customer's billing and personal
information is "temporaly unavailable" (sic).
Customers need to verify their identity by visiting the site or risk
having their account canceled, according to the message, which is
signed by "Jhon Krepp" from the "PayPal Billing Department."
The actual site is almost identical to PayPal's real site, with the
same graphics, layout and wording. In fact, many of the links on the
site point back to the actual PayPal Web site. PayPal could not be
reached for comment about the scam site.
Adding to the ruse, visitors to the paypal-billingnetwork.net site
are greeted with an authentic-sounding pop-up message. "We've worked
hard to help make PayPal even better! However, we have to ask you to
re-enter your Billing Information," the message reads, in part.
Visitors are asked to have their last PayPal billing statement and
credit cards handy before entering the site.
PayPal members who do not enter their billing information will have
their PayPal accounts canceled, according to the message. After
acknowledging this message, users are presented with a form that asks
for a wide range of personal and financial information including
Social Security number, driver's license number, date of birth and
credit card information.
Unlike much of the rest of the site, however, the form does not
reside on PayPal's Web site, but on a server at a different IP
address. Paypal-billingnetwork.net is registered through Vancouver,
Wash., Web hosting company Dotster. Dotster did not immediately
respond to requests for comment.
On Tuesday, e-mail filtering company SurfControl PLC of Scotts
Valley, California, issued a warning about brand spoofing, saying it
has noticed a jump since March in unsolicited e-mail messages tied to
fraudulent brand spoofing scams.
Like the most recent PayPal scam, the fraudulent e-mail messages
pretend to be from customer service or security officials at well-
known companies and direct the spam recipient to phony Web sites that
harvest their confidential information, SurfControl said.
Because of its role as an online payments clearinghouse with a large
user base, PayPal has long been the target of online criminals.
Recently, however, other high-profile companies have been the targets
of brand spoofing, including Best Buy and Discover Financial
Services' DiscoverCard. Sony Electronics., United Parcel Services and
Bank of America have also been the targets of brand spoofing in the
last few months, SurfControl said.
SurfControl did not receive any brand spoofing e-mail before March,
but has received more than five new examples of brand spoofing spam
each month since then, the company said. The proliferation of open
proxy servers is largely responsible for the problem, SurfControl
said.
Lists of the loosely managed or insecure proxy servers are freely
available online, as are tools for locating open proxies, according
to Susan Larson, vice president of global product content at
SurfControl. Spammers use the servers to forward large volumes of e-
mail messages to recipients. An open proxy server will not only
forward the e-mail messages, but also insert its own Internet address
in place of the original source information, effectively covering the
spammer's tracks, Larson said.
Working from lists of harvested e-mail addresses, spammers target
high-profile companies, counting on the fact that a certain
percentage of recipients will have a relationship with those
companies, Larson said. Because of the low cost of sending spam and
the huge sums that can be reaped by stealing someone's identity, only
a small number of recipients need to fall for the ruse in order for
the spammers to turn a profit, she said.
Consumers' growing comfort with online retail is also partially to
blame for the increase in brand spoofing scams, according to
Larson. "So many more people are trusting the Internet to do
financial business. We're not as skeptical as we used to be about
going out on the Internet and giving passwords or credit card numbers
or bank account numbers," she said.
The Federal Trade Commission recently warned Internet users about the
problem on its Web page http://www.consumer.gov/idtheft>. The FTC
recommends checking for "sloppy copy" such as spelling mistakes or
grammatical errors in the solicitation. Consumers should also check
with the company in question before providing any personal
information on a Web site, the FTC said.
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- Posts: 2322
- Joined: Thu May 10, 2001 9:41 am
nklr - paypal users watch for this scam
Arden Kysely wrote:
snip Paypal and Ebay have both been dealing with this sort of problem for a while now. One easy way to make sure you are going to the correct site, is to manually type in the address every time. www.ups.com paypal.com ebay.com etc it's an easy way to avoid the problems. Devon -- "It's a troublesome world, all the people who are in it, are troubled with troubles almost every minute" Dr. Seuss> > For those of you with PayPal accounts out there, here's some info on > a new type of internet scam using a fake PayPal email and web site. > > __Arden > > A new Web site spoofs the PayPal online payment site and attempts to > trick PayPal customers into divulging sensitive account and billing > information. The fake Web site is the latest example in what security > experts say is a rising trend of "brand spoofing" scams. > > PayPal customers are directed to the site, www.paypal- > billingnetwork.net, by an e-mail message that appears to come from > the Mountain View, Calif., company.
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- Posts: 8
- Joined: Mon Mar 17, 2003 4:06 pm
doohickey for the tengai?
--- In DSN_klr650@yahoogroups.com, "Jim Nyffeler"
wrote:
same> I have a friend that just purchased a '91 Tengai. Do they have the
Jim, I believe all Tengais had the one piece (that is, not welded) doohickey. It seems that these are not prone to failure like the later types. However an upgraded replacement and perhaps a spring is cheap insurance.I got mine from Jake at www.sagebrushmachine.com and very well made it is. Tony Tengai Dorset UK> problem with the doohickey as the late model KLR's? > > Jim Nyffeler > '98 Concours > '02 KLR650 > Lincoln, NE USA > COG 4547, IBA 8936
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