SCAM ALERT: H1N1 E-mail

 

SCAM ALERT: H1N1 E-mail Could Infect Your Computer

Columbus, Ohio — Ohioans are urged to beware of an H1N1-related e-mail that could infect your PC with a virus. The scammers pose as the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Attorney General Richard Cordray says, in an effort to pray on people’s fears about contracting the H1N1 virus. The e-mail encourages the user to create a personal vaccination profile. It provides a link to a Web page that looks similar to the CDC site. Within the page are downloadable instructions for creating your personal vaccination profile. Cordray warns that by downloading the instructions, visitors are downloading a virus onto their computers. “Any time you receive an e-mail from someone you are not familiar with, I strongly recommend avoiding the provided links,” Cordray said. “Clicking on that link can unleash downloadable viruses capable of capturing your personal information and sending it back to the scam artist.” Because of these potential phishing attacks and e-mail scams, Cordray encourages consumers who are interested in H1N1 influenza virus information to visit the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services informational Web site at www.flu.gov or the Ohio Department of Health informational site, www.flu.ohio.gov. Cordray also offers the following tips to help Ohioans avoid phishing scams: • Contact the institution yourself: Don’t respond to unsolicited requests for your personal information. Instead, contact the organization at a phone number or a Web address you know to be correct. • Don’t click on links in e-mails: Be cautious about opening any attachments or downloading any files from e-mail messages. Links and attachments can make your computer vulnerable to viruses. • Look for warning signs: Misspelled words or a lack of personal greetings may signal fraud. However, the presence of a personal greeting or a lack of errors does not guarantee legitimacy. Always be skeptical. • Use spam filters, anti-virus software, anti-spyware software and a firewall: Update your security software regularly. The software can help stop your computer from accepting unwanted files that can be sent via phishing e-mails. Don’t give out personal information via e-mail: E-mail is not a secure method of transmitting personal information. A bank or governmental agency will never request personal information via e-mail.

Monitor your accounts: Review credit card and bank account statements as soon as you receive them. If you find unauthorized charges, immediately notify your bank or credit card provider. • Report phishing scams to the company or organization the scam artist is impersonating and to the Ohio Attorney General’s Office.