Macs-241

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Jun 27, 2022
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Scammers are impersonating banks.........................................................

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Bank impersonation scammers​

There's a rise in criminals calling, emailing or messaging people and pretending to be from the bank so that they can steal your money.
The scammers ask you for personal or financial information or to transfer funds or to give them a one-time security code over the phone. They often claim to be from the bank’s fraud department and might say that there has been a compromised account or suspicious transaction.
They may use technology to make it look like the call is coming from the bank’s phone number. They may send a message that looks like it comes from the same conversation thread as genuine bank messages.

How to spot the scam​

You may get a call, message or email from a scammer claiming to be from the bank and asking for personal and bank details.
The scammer may tell you there is a problem with your account and ask you to transfer money to ‘keep it safe’. They may say it’s an urgent problem to get you to respond.
Anyone calling and behaving like this is probably a criminal.
What you can do:
  • Do not use any phone numbers in a message.
  • Ask for a reference number and contact your bank directly through a phone number that you find and confirm yourself.
  • Hang up if you receive a call from someone claiming to be from your bank requesting you to transfer money.
  • Don’t click on any links in an email or message on your phone, even if it looks like it comes from your bank.

How the scam works​

Someone calls, emails or messages you saying they’re from the bank.
The phone call, email or message looks like it comes from the bank. The message may be in the same message thread as a previous legitimate banking message.
They say they’re investigating a problem with your account, like a hacked account, suspicious transaction, or online banking outage.
These criminals ask you for personal or financial information like account details or security codes.
They will then use your account details to steal your money.

Stay protected​

STOP - Don’t give money or personal or financial information like passwords, security codes, PINs or tokens. Don’t click on any links if you’re unsure. Say no, hang up, delete.
CHECK - Verify who you are talking to. Contact your bank using your banking app or a phone number you have sourced from your banking app, bank website, statement, or card.
PROTECT - Act quickly. If you have transferred funds, provided access to your account or information to a scammer, contact your bank immediately and report to Scamwatch. Tell your friends and family; it helps to share your experience so they can give you support and to help them stay safe from scams.

If you've been affected​

  • If you have lost money, contact your bank or financial institution immediately.
  • If you've had personal information stolen or need support to recover from a scam, contact IDCARE on 1800 595 160.
  • Help others by reporting scams to Scamwatch.
  • Tell your friends and family: you can share your experience, get support and help to protect others from scams.

Who is the National Anti-Scam Centre?​

The National Anti-Scam Centre is where government and industry work together to protect Australians.

We're harnessing shared resources and smarter analytics to identify blind spots, strengthen weak links and use data to react faster, stopping scams before they happen.
Our aim is to make Australia a harder target for scammers.
For more information about how to avoid or report a scam, visit the Scamwatch website.
We send these alerts to tell you about new scams and how to avoid them. We don't use links in these emails. Not clicking on links in emails and messages is one of the easiest ways to protect yourself from scams.
You have received this email because you have subscribed to receive Scamwatch scam alerts issued by the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission.

If you have any doubts about an email's source, verify the sender by independent means - use their official contact details to check the email is legitimate before clicking on links or opening attachments.
 
It really is important to report any scam messages that you receive to Scamwatch rather than just deleting the message and then forgetting about it.....if all Scam messages are reported then we may begin to see a lot less of them in the future....here's hoping.:unsure:;)
 
Yeah, just keep talking to them, tell em they sound sweet and sexy, then ask if they want to f$%$. They hang up pretty quickly. Yes male or female.
 
And if they are caught they should be named and shamed, and made to pay all the money back, even if it means selling their house and car etc.
 

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