Committee News

Consumer Alert

  • November 2024
  • The forest

ALEXANDRA HOUSE, PUBLIC AFFAIRS AND DIGITAL MEDIA INTERN
DON’T TAKE THE BAIT ON PHISHING SCAMS

Have you ever gotten a text or email warning you that something is wrong with an account online? Maybe it says your streaming account is about to be suspended unless you respond quickly. It might even have a link that will supposedly fix your account’s problems. The message looks real. But is it?
Your first instinct might be to click to solve your problems. Don’t click. There’s likely nothing wrong. Instead, it might be a phishing scam. That’s when scammers pose as well-known companies to get you to give up sensitive information via text or email. A phishing email might: say you need to confirm some personal or financial information—you don’t. say they’ve noticed some suspicious activity or login attempts—they haven’t.

  1. Claim there’s a problem with your account or your payment information—there isn’t.
  2. Say you need to confirm some personal or financial information—you don’t.

    Don’t click on any links in unexpected emails or texts.
    While real companies might send you emails or text messages, they won’t do things like send a link to update your payment information. Only scammers do that. Even opening a link in an unexpected text or email can expose you to scammers—even if you don’t enter any sensitive info.
    So, don’t click on any links in unexpected emails or texts. If you’re concerned, contact the company directly using a link you already use or a phone number you know is correct. And if you think you’ve given someone your Social Security, credit card, or bank account number, report it at Identity Theft.gov and get a recovery plan. If you clicked on a link in an unexpected email, update your security software and run a scan to look for viruses and malware.
    Then report the phishing scam. Tell the FTC at ReportFraud.ftc.gov, forward suspicious texts to SPAM (7726), and forward suspicious emails to [email protected].