02/05/2004: Technologica
Close a pop-up, call Nauru
from St. Petersburg Times (Florida)
In the latest Web scam, surfers who close out some popups are being hit with hefty long-distance charges.
If popup ads aren't annoying enough, imagine getting ripped off for hundreds of dollars just for trying to close one of those online ads that bursts onto your computer screen.
In the latest version of a long-running Internet scam, unsuspecting victims who surf the Web via phone modems are being hit with hefty long-distance charges for calls to exotic locales such as the South Pacific island of Nauru and the west African nation of Sao Tome & Principe.
The recent wave of "modem hijacking" attacks has become serious enough that Verizon Communications has alerted its customer-service representatives recently to be prepared for calls from customers who have been duped by the scam, according to Verizon spokesman Bob Elek.
Here's how it works: A Web surfer tries to close a popup window but accidentally clicks to download a software program. The program, planted on the victim's computer, dials overseas numbers and bills the victim for the calls at exorbitant rates.
That's a good one. But I'm sure that the BBC will find a way to blame it on Slashdot.
More
SECTION: BUSINESS; Pg. 1DLENGTH: 468 words
HEADLINE: Internet ads lead to phone fleecing
BYLINE: LOUIS HAU and NANCY PARADIS
BODY:
In the latest Web scam, surfers who close out some popups are being hit with
hefty long-distance charges.
If popup ads aren't annoying enough, imagine getting ripped off for hundreds
of dollars just for trying to close one of those online ads that bursts onto
your computer screen.
In the latest version of a long-running Internet scam, unsuspecting victims
who surf the Web via phone modems are being hit with hefty long-distance charges
for calls to exotic locales such as the South Pacific island of Nauru and the
west African nation of Sao Tome & Principe.
The recent wave of "modem hijacking" attacks has become serious enough that
Verizon Communications has alerted its customer-service representatives recently
to be prepared for calls from customers who have been duped by the scam,
according to Verizon spokesman Bob Elek.
Here's how it works: A Web surfer tries to close a popup window but
accidentally clicks to download a software program. The program, planted on the
victim's computer, dials overseas numbers and bills the victim for the calls at
exorbitant rates.
Elek said the calls reported to Verizon so far have been to five tiny
countries unfamiliar to many Americans: Nauru, Sao Tome & Principe, the African
nations of Comoros and Guinea-Bissau and the central European principality of
Lichtenstein.
One Tampa Bay area customer ensnared by the scam was saddled with about $350
in overseas long-distance charges, Elek said.
And there's not much Verizon can do for customers, Elek said, because callers
are billed directly from the overseas phone number they call, not by Verizon or
their long-distance carrier, even though charges for the calls appear on the
customer's Verizon bill.
In addition, the popup window that starts the scam usually asks if you want
to download software, so the company could argue it has the customer's approval.
Elek said Verizon can provide a customer with the name of the billing entity
but can't provide much further assistance. He said he didn't have the names of
any of the companies immediately available. Verizon has no immediate plans to
warn its customers of the practice, he said.
Jason Duff, a spokesman for Sprint, which provides local phone service in
Citrus County and parts of Hernando and Pasco counties, said he wasn't familiar
with the most recent incidents of modem hijacking but acknowledged that the
company has warned customers before of such scams.
Marta Casas-Celaya, a spokeswoman for BellSouth, which provides local phone
service in most of Hernando County and a small part of Pasco County, said she
wasn't aware of any recent reports of modem hijacking against her company's
customers.