Some Russian crooks tried to steal my PayPal account info twice this week.
I did all the right things -- I reported it to Paypal, my credit card company, my ISP and the FTC. The second time I even reported it to AT&T World Services and Hotmail/MSN because the fake web site was located in the USA and using AT&T as an ISP, and the real domain name was set up by someone with a hotmail address per the WHOIS database.
Betcha they try to steal my info a third time within another week.
Is there anything else that I can do? Would it help to report them to the local police (where thbe servers are located) also? What about the International Police? Both e-mails originated with ISPs in Russia.
It just seems the height of irony that the attempts to deal with phishing are so unorganized and ineffective. (At least it seems that way to me.) Considering how effective a RDBMS can be and how interconnected we all are, I just think we could do much better. </rant>
I did all the right things -- I reported it to Paypal, my credit card company, my ISP and the FTC. The second time I even reported it to AT&T World Services and Hotmail/MSN because the fake web site was located in the USA and using AT&T as an ISP, and the real domain name was set up by someone with a hotmail address per the WHOIS database.
Betcha they try to steal my info a third time within another week.
Is there anything else that I can do? Would it help to report them to the local police (where thbe servers are located) also? What about the International Police? Both e-mails originated with ISPs in Russia.
It just seems the height of irony that the attempts to deal with phishing are so unorganized and ineffective. (At least it seems that way to me.) Considering how effective a RDBMS can be and how interconnected we all are, I just think we could do much better. </rant>
