How-To Geek - Thursday, February 13, 2020 at 1:40 AM
Watch Out: This Verizon Smishing Scam Is Crazy Realistic
Piotr Swat/Shutterstock.com
Text message scams are becoming more common, and the latest scam we’ve seen is
the most sophisticated yet. The scammer impersonates Verizon, sending you an
“account security” text message that takes you to a shockingly convincing copy
of Verizon’s website.
We opened the link to see the scam in action. Don’t try this at home: If you
receive a scam message, we recommend against opening any links attached to it.
You should also delete the message and block the sender.
The scam text message says, “Your Verizon account security needs validation”
and invites you to tap a link to “validate your account.” Once you do, you end
up at a phishing website that looks almost exactly like Verizon’s real website.
The fake website asks for your My Verizon mobile number or user ID and
password. After you provide those, it’ll ask for your account PIN. Finally, it
requests all your personal details to “identify yourself.”
For smishing scams, this is convincing work. The website looks real and
authentic—if you don’t look too hard at the address, which isn’t actually
Verizon’s actual website.
Like a real account sign-in page, it even checks the information you’re
entering. If you leave your name blank, it’ll ask you to enter a name before
you continue.
At the end of the process, the phishing website thanks you for providing your
information and “redirects you to the home page.”
For maximum deception, the phishing website actually redirects you to Verizon’s
real website at the end of the process. If you don’t look too close, you might
be deceived into thinking you were on Verizon’s website the whole time.
What’s the game? We didn’t provide real Verizon account details, so we can’t
say for sure. The scammer will probably try to take over your Verizon account,
order smartphones on credit, and stick you with the bill. That’s a common scam
these days, as we discovered when we talked to fake job recruiters. The scammer
could also use your information to execute a phone port-out scam, stealing your
phone number and using it to bypass two-step verification on your accounts. If
you’ve encountered this scam and given your personal details to the phishing
website, you should contact Verizon immediately.
Smishing is on the rise, bringing spam email scams to the Messages app on your
phone.
Scammers are also sending messages with fake FedEx package tracking numbers and
warnings about suspending Netflix accounts, but this latest one is the most
dangerous we’ve seen.
Be alert for suspicious messages. If you haven’t already gotten a scammy text
message, you probably will in the future. Here’s how to protect yourself from
smishing scams.
RELATED: What Is Smishing, and How Do You Protect Yourself?
https://www.howtogeek.com/657333/watch-out-this-verizon-smishing-scam-is-crazy-realistic/
David Goldfield
Assistive Technology Specialist
Feel free to visit my Web site
WWW.DavidGoldfield.info