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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Tuesday, July 22, 2003

Identity theft via bogus e-mail, Web sites on the rise

By David Ho
Associated Press

 •  Protecting your privacy online

Officials say consumers also should:

Be wary of e-mail requests for personal information, especially from companies that should already have the information.

Make sure an Internet connection is secure — with an icon of a lock visible on the Web browser — before submitting personal information.

Monitor credit card and bank statements for unauthorized charges.

WASHINGTON — Stealing identities and credit card numbers with bogus e-mail and Web sites that appear to come from legitimate companies is an increasing problem on the Internet, federal officials warned yesterday.

The Federal Trade Commission said it had brought its first case against this type of scheme, called "spoofing" or "carding." A 17-year-old California boy accused of posing as America Online agreed to settle federal charges by accepting a lifetime ban on sending junk e-mail and paying a $3,500 fine, the FTC said.

The FBI has received increasing numbers of complaints about this kind of scam, said Keith Lourdeau, a section chief with the bureau's Cyber Division. Meanwhile, a survey released yesterday by Gartner Inc. found that roughly 7 million Americans were victims of identity theft last year, nearly an 80 percent rise from a year ago.

"Due in part to this growing scam, we are seeing a rise in identity theft, credit card fraud and other Internet frauds," Lourdeau said.

In the California case, consumers received authentic-looking e-mails claiming there was a billing problem with their AOL account and asking them to update their information or risk losing Internet access, the FTC said. The message included a link to an "AOL Billing Center," a fake Web page dressed up with the company's logo, colors and links to real AOL sites.

The counterfeit site directed consumers to fix the billing problem by entering credit card numbers and other personal information including AOL screen names and passwords, Social Security numbers, bank routing numbers, credit limits, mother's maiden name and billing addresses.

The FTC said the stolen information was used to order merchandise and make online payments worth at least $8,000. The agency said it would not release the name of the teen involved because he is a minor.

"Don't take the bait. Be skeptical of e-mail messages telling you your account will be shut down," FTC Commissioner Mozelle Thompson said. "If you do receive an e-mail warning like this, don't click on the link."

Instead, he said, people should contact the company directly by phone or through a Web site or e-mail address known to be authentic.