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Monday, 13 February 2012

The target was material for phishing attacks

According to the SFGate, the intrusion that AT&T reported earlier this week was not aimed at stealing credit card information, it was aimed at providing the raw data to allow the crackers to perform targetted phishing attacks on a massive scale.  By seeding an email with information gathered from AT&T’s database, the phishers can add a level authenticity that makes even some of the most suspicious people on the Internet accept an email as authentic.
This is just one more reason to never respond directly to any request from a merchant or bank that comes to you in the form of an email.  As always, if you think an email alert is real, open a browser window and manually type in your bank’s URL, never click on the link in the email. 

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