You receive a call on your phone.The caller says they're from your bank and they're calling about a suspected fraud.
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Derick Rethansreplied to Terence Eden on last edited by
@Edent How and what is faked there then?
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Terence Edenreplied to Derick Rethans on last edited by
@derickr nothing is faked in app. It is a genuine notification from your bank.
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flabberghasterreplied to Simon Wood on last edited by
@simonwood @Edent yeah, same. I had told my bank I intended to travel internationally and then when I got there my card stopped working and they called me saying there was suspected fraud on my card. I knew it was legit because I called back on the number on my card, but I think it's bad practice to initiate calls.
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Shannon Skinner (she/her)replied to Terence Eden on last edited by
@Edent
The remedy is to hang up and call the bank directly, right? -
Richard W. Woodley NO THREADS ๐จ๐ฆ๐น๐ดโโ๏ธ๐ท ๐บ๏ธreplied to Terence Eden on last edited by
@Edent
Nothing in that image to prove it's actually your bank app . -
Chris Ferdinandi โ๏ธreplied to Terence Eden on last edited by
@Edent Yea, I definitely think it's a scam.
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julian NodeBB GNU/Linuxreplied to Richard W. Woodley NO THREADS ๐จ๐ฆ๐น๐ดโโ๏ธ๐ท ๐บ๏ธ on last edited by
@[email protected] in this example you can assume the notification came from the Chase application itself, the one installed on your phone.
For the sake of example you could also substitute this with an SMS 2FA, that is a similar attack vector.
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@Edent Could be scam, no?
Method:
1. Scammer calls you and Chase at same time
2. Chase is unsure of scammers identity, so sends them in-app 2FA dialog
3. You hit yes, and Chase thinks scammer is you -
@zoe bingo!
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Captain Janegay ๐ซreplied to Extreme Electronics on last edited by
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funbaker #AssangeIsNotGuiltyreplied to Terence Eden on last edited by
@Edent there used to be a time where they told customers at every possibility: our employees will never ask for your password etc.
I think they still do.
Wtf happened. -
Terence Edenreplied to funbaker #AssangeIsNotGuilty on last edited by
@funbaker they haven't asked for your password.
You haven't given the person on the phone any details. -
Lexreplied to Terence Eden on last edited by [email protected]
@Edent I love this scam. The banks need to repeat the standard advice of never passing information to a caller about your account, ever. Their security advice is you must call back on their standard number.
It's definitely the bank's failure to not make this explicit on the app notification. I hope they are rushing to fix it :blobsweats:
"We will never call you and ask for information"
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dinosaurdiggerreplied to Terence Eden on last edited by
@Edent no because i never answer my phone
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@flabberghaster @simonwood @Edent Yes, always call back on a phone number that you know to be legit when your "bank" calls.
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Mister Moo ๐ฎreplied to Terence Eden on last edited by
@Edent The number of people in this thread insisting they wouldn't fall for this fake screen even though it's *real* suggests that yes, most people would and will fall for it.
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australopithecusreplied to Terence Eden on last edited by
@Edent
That is sneaky af.Good rule of thumb is: incoming calls are informational only, never "confirm" anything during an interaction that you did not initiate.
Two reasons this holds up:
First, remember that your bank doesn't even want to spend money on enough people to *answer* incoming calls, much less make outgoing ones. If your bank does need to contact you they'll probably just send an automated email or text.
Second, if your bank calls you, they already know it's your phone.
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Terence Edenreplied to Mister Moo ๐ฎ on last edited by
@MisterMoo
No, don't you understand? They're *far* too clever to fall for it! Not like all those normiesโฆ -
A human beingreplied to Terence Eden on last edited by
@Edent That is so clever, but so obvious when the scam is laid out in front of you. Ingenious.
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Resting Facebitchreplied to Terence Eden on last edited by
@Edent The notification would freak me the living fuck out I'd hang up, immediately transfer everything in that account to one of my other accounts and then ask the bank questions later.
That's provided I actually answered my phone in the first place.