The price of keeping your money is etermal vigilance ...
John Philpot Curran, or whoever else first used the phrase which was my quote of the day for today, was absolutely right to say that the price of liberty is eternal vigilance (or something similar).
It's worth remembering that this applies as much to the threat to freedom which can be caused by overzealous action on behalf of society's own guardians as well as external threats.
And in the internet age, it is equally true that if you don't want to be defrauded of your money, you have to be constantly alert. Especially against those who pretend to be defending you against fraudsters!
Most of those who attempt to trick people into giving out their account details give themselves away by errors in English or by something which does not quite match the tone used by the company they are pretending to be. But some are very clever indeed.
Take the fraudulent email below which I received today from some thief pretending to be Amazon.
(Don't bother posting any comments below making any of the obvious jokes in response to that, I would probably have to delete them to avoid exposing myself to legal action.)
I was on the verge of contacting Amazon customer service to ask if this email was genuine when I realised that it had to be a fraud because the email account it had been sent to is not the one I use to communicate with Amazon..
I can't help thinking that someone clever enough to set up this scam could probably find half a dozen ways to earn more money legally than they will be making by stealing from people. But sadly while original sin remains there will always be those who abuse their talents in this way.
The only safe rule is, if you get an email, text, or phone call along these lines from a company you deal with, and you think there is any possibility it might be genuine, contact the company the message claims to be from, and use a contact method you already had, not one given in the email, text or phone call.
Remember - if you think there is any possibility that someone who contacts you is a criminal trying to defraud you, they almost certainly are. If you think that a message is genuine, don't lose sight of the possibility that it might still be a criminal trying to defraud you. If there is a way to rob you, the crooks will find it.
This was the bogus message I received today ...
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