Welp,exotic eroticism tumblerfemdom another day and another way for thieves to violate your privacy and commit credit card fraud.
Scammers have figured out how to view your mail before it even arrives at your house, and have used this advantage to open credit card accounts in victims' names and then time the theft of new cards from mailboxes pretty much the moment they arrive. And the tool giving crooks this edge comes courtesy of the United States Postal Service.
So notes Krebs on Security, which reports on a Secret Service notification sent to law enforcement on Nov. 6. At issue is something called Informed Delivery, which gives those who sign up the ability "to view greyscale images of the exterior, address side of letter-sized mailpieces and track packages in one convenient location."
SEE ALSO: The hackers getting paid to keep the internet safeEssentially, it's an online portal for seeing what mail is on its way to you. This, it turns out, is a huge help to scammers who have managed to open up accounts in the names of unwitting individuals — which sounds shockingly easy to do.
The Secret Service warning reported by Krebs on Security makes note of a Michigan case where seven people stand accused of stealing credit cards out of mailboxes and racking up hundreds of thousands of dollars in charges.
To create an Informed Delivery account, a person needs to provide a name, address, and email. You also have to verify that you really are who you say you are, and that's where it gets sketchy. A person opening an account can chose to verify his or her identity online, which this reporter did, and is presented with a series of so-called "knowledge-based authentication" questions.
These questions include old chestnuts like where you've lived in the past, and what state issued your Social Security number. As Krebs on Security points out, at lot of these answers are easily found through Google searches or are no longer private thanks to incidents like last year's Equifax hack.
Notably, USPS is aware that this can be abused, and now mails you a notice that you've signed up for this service. However, if a thief signs up for the service immediately after the fraudulently ordered credit card has been mailed, it's likely he or she can get the card before the USPS notification arrives.
Sneaky, right?
There are a few steps you can take to protect yourself against this attack. For starters, open your own USPS Informed Delivery account. That way, if scammers attempt to do so in your name at your address, it'd be too late. That is, unless someone else also lives at your address — say, your spouse or roommate — because in that case your address is still vulnerable.
You can also try a more direct measure. According to the Dallas Morning News, you can opt out of the entire thing by emailing [email protected] and requesting that they block an "individual account."
Just make sure your roommates do the same.
Topics Cybersecurity
(Editor: {typename type="name"/})
The rise of YouTube: 20 years of creators, culture, and content at VidCon
ByteDance aims to launch video
France vs. Poland 2024 livestream: Watch Euro 2024 for free
Webb space telescope just found something unprecedented in the Orion Nebula
Best robot vacuum deal: Save $350 on the Eufy X10 Pro Omni
Wordle today: The answer and hints for June 25
NASA's Webb telescope video is a mind
'House of the Dragon' Season 2 perfectly illustrates how men's egos start wars
The Year in Tech: 2014 Top Stories
ByteDance aims to launch video
Meta deletes all AI character profiles on Facebook, Insta after backlash
Webb telescope's photo of Saturn looks really weird. Here's why.
接受PR>=1、BR>=1,流量相当,内容相关类链接。