FBI警告:假冒FIFA网站正被用于窃取个人信息
FBI Warns That Fake FIFA Website Being Used to Steal Personal Information

原始链接: https://www.zerohedge.com/personal-finance/fbi-warns-fake-fifa-website-being-used-steal-personal-information

美国联邦调查局(FBI)发布警告,提醒公众警惕冒充国际足联(FIFA)和世界杯官方平台的欺诈网站。诈骗者利用这些伪造域名(通常在拼写上仅有细微差别或使用具有欺骗性的后缀)来窃取用户的敏感个人信息及银行资料。此外,这些网站还被用于兜售伪造门票和虚假招待套餐。 为防范此类威胁,FBI建议用户在浏览器中手动输入“fifa.com”,而不要直接点击搜索引擎的搜索结果。FBI同时提醒用户在点击广告时务必谨慎,因为恶意链接可能会将用户引导至非法网站。 尽管FBI已经识别并追踪了大量恶意域名,但他们强调,在7月19日赛事结束前,新的欺诈网站仍可能不断出现。认为自己已受害或被盯上的个人,应向FBI互联网犯罪投诉中心(ic3.gov)报告。 此外,FBI正在密切监控赛事周边的安全状况,包括对比赛场馆附近的无人机禁飞限制执行情况。

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原文

Authored by Jack Phillips via The Epoch Times,

The FBI on June 16 advised people to be wary of fraudulent websites that try to mimic World Cup or FIFA sites, as the agency warned that such websites have been used to steal personal information and sell counterfeit tickets.

In a public service announcement, the FBI stated that scammers and fraudsters have launched spoofing attempts designed to mimic FIFA’s official website as the World Cup games hosted in North America continue.

“Threat actors often create spoofed websites by slightly altering characteristics of legitimate website domains, with the purpose of gathering personally identifiable information entered by a user into the site, including name, home address, phone number, email address, and banking information,” the FBI statement reads.

The individuals behind such websites may be attempting to trick people into entering sensitive information that could be used to “create new accounts in a victim’s name and ultimately defraud the victim,” the FBI stated.

The federal law enforcement bureau noted that it has identified individuals who had attempted to collect personal information, sell counterfeit World Cup tickets or “hospitality products,” or engaged in other forms of malicious activity in connection with the scams.

The fraudulent website domains could include alternate spellings of words or use a different top-level domain, or TLD, referring to the final segment of the web address, such as .com, .gov, .org, and more, according to the notice.

Scammers may also create a deceptive version of a legitimate website, such as fifa.com, that tricks people into thinking they are going to the official website, it stated. Some include website domains that use alternate domain extensions such as “.blue,” “.beer,” “.city,” and more. Dozens of fraudulent domains were identified by the FBI that have been linked to the scheme, including fake domains related to FIFA jobs, merchandise, or tickets.

FBI officials advised people to first verify website URLs before they enter potentially sensitive or personally identifying information and to go to FIFA’s official website by typing the URL into their browser rather than relying on results produced by search engines, while also verifying that it reads fifa.com.

An Epoch Times review found that many of the websites listed by the FBI in the alert appeared to be down. However, the FBI stated that the “public should be aware that new websites will continue to appear.”

“Exercise caution when clicking on advertisements. Before clicking on an advertisement, check the URL to make sure the site is authentic,” the notice reads. “Malicious advertisements may redirect users to a different website than indicated.”

The June 16 public service announcement did not say whether anyone was victimized by a FIFA website-related scam. But victims who believe that they were targeted in a scam should file a complaint with the FBI’s Internet Crime Complaint Center at ic3.gov, it states

Aside from combating fake websites, the FBI has also acted to keep drones away from World Cup games. Earlier this week, an illegal immigrant with a prior criminal history, including a cocaine-trafficking conviction, was arrested for flying a drone near a World Cup event in Atlanta, the FBI announced.

The World Cup lasts from June 11 until July 19, with matches being played across the United States, Mexico, and Canada.

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