Phishing fraud is not going away. As the fraudsters expand so do their list of targets. The latest one that was reported by Alex French, CEO of Bitbuzz, targets AIB:
AIB Targetted by Phishing Attack
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About this Entry
This page contains a single entry by Michele Neylon published on October 19, 2005 11:00 AM.
What makes a search engine friendly site? was the previous entry in this blog.
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I see it doesn't even try to use https.
My personal motto when it comes to online banking is if the bar ain't yellow stay away! obviously the URL has to match too, and not come from an e-mail :p
Ed
It probably wouldn't have got past our phishing filters, but even those are being circumvented by some of the phishers of late
M
I'm still confused as to why you'd do thing. There's not exactly much you can do on 24-hour online without phoning up and confirming loads of details that the phishing site doesn't have access to. Basically if someone got onto my banking they couldn't do much more than pay off my credit card bill or transfer money into my saving account.
Dave: Whats to stop them ringing the bank once they have your account details? Its been a while since I rang the bank but IIRC the only security measure they ask you for is your PIN (which the phishers now have) ...
When I ring up, they ask me, Date of Birth, Address and regularly ask me for either the last transaction or the balance! Maybe I'm just (un)lucky.