No, these are not from Apple

Seems like every week we’re seeing new scams out there. Here’s one that’s affecting lots of people in the Apple ecosystem. There are many emails out there being sent to people that tell you your iCloud storage is full and that they’re going to delete all of your files and photo, they attempt to get you to click a link provide them a credit card, and update your Apple iCloud storage. There’s only one problem with this. They’re all fake.

This is just another example of social engineering. Social engineering is an attempt to get you to cause your self problems or provide private information like credit card data to the scammer. They don’t get into your computer, they don’t hack you, they get you to hack yourself.

The whole idea is to scare you into thinking there’s a problem and get you to click a link and go down some path that’s going to provide them something. It may be passwords to your account, or it may be credit card or banking information don’t fall for this. Apple will not provide an email such as this to tell you your account storage is full, if your account storage is full, you will see a pop-up message on your Apple device that when you click lead you to your iCloud information on the particular device. It doesn’t take you to a website. It doesn’t ask you directly for credit card information. It takes you to Apple’s on service on the device.

The best thing you could do is delete these type of emails. There’s really no way that reporting them helps and since they are also coming from different email addresses even if you block that address, you’re really not helping yourself.

 

Computer Scams can really Ruin your day…

Having a bad day today?  Well it could be a lot worse.  What it you were surfing the web on Facebook and suddenly saw this?

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Many people have seen messages such as this, particularly by clicking a link on Facebook.  Don’t fall for this scam.  The real infection here is to get you to call the phone number, let them connect to your computer to “Fix” it, and then have them install real spyware.  Then they show you how the machine is “infected” and tell you they can fix it for $190 only to steel your credit card info and make charges to your card.

Don’t make an errant click into a terrible mistake.  Force quit your browser to get rid of the message and ignore it. NEVER call a phone number for a computer problem that pops up on your screen and NEVER let someone you do not know make a connection remotely to your PC or Mac.

This can happen anywhere on the web but lately, many people see this from clicking a link from Facebook.