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| Internet Scam/Spam or Fraudulent WebSites ScamFraudAlert believe that this is a cancer that is under the radar. If we the public do not ACT we might just get HIT. |
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THUGS, CRIMINALS, CROOKS. This group is back and operating. We need to shut them down. http://www.bflogistics.biz/ USATODAY.com Cybercrooks lure citizens into international crime Sunday July 10, 11:03 pm ET To Karl, a 38-year-old former cabdriver hoping for a career in real estate sales, the help-wanted ad radiated hope. The ad sought "correspondence managers" willing to receive parcels at home, then reship them overseas. The pay: $24 a package. Karl applied at kflogistics.biz, a fraudulent Web site imitating a legitimate site. He quickly received an e-mail notifying him he had landed the job, followed by instructions on how to take receipt of digital cameras and laptop computers, affix new labels and "reship" the items overseas. Easy enough. Within weeks, he had sent off six packages, including digital cameras and computer parts, to various addresses in Russia. Little did Karl know he had become an unwitting recruit in a growing scheme to assist online criminals, the latest wrinkle in digital fraud that costs businesses hundreds of millions of dollars a year. Before long, Karl began to feel like Sydney Bristow from the TV show Alias, who wrangles her way through dealings with the Eastern European underworld. (Fearing possible retaliation, Karl asked that his real name not be used for this article.) One day, a $4,358 electronic deposit appeared out of nowhere in Karl's online bank account, followed by e-mail instructions to keep a small amount as pay and wire the rest to Moscow. Then he began receiving account statements intended for online banking customers from across the USA. Someone had changed the billing addresses for stolen credit cards and bank account numbers to his residence in Grass Valley. One of the letters was intended for 28-year-old Ryan Sesker of Des Moines, letting him know that his credit limit had been raised to $5,000 - a request he never made. Around the same time, a USA TODAY investigation found, someone accessed Sesker's online banking account and extracted $4,300. "I thought I could work a few hours a day and make a couple hundred bucks, not get ****ed into something out of Alias," Karl said later, sipping a cup of steamed milk in a sleepy cafe. What Karl had become, in fact, was a "mule." Karl and other ordinary citizens are being widely recruited by international crime groups to serve as unwitting collaborators - referred to as mules - in Internet scams to convert stolen personal and financial data into tangible goods and cash. Cybercriminals order merchandise online with stolen credit cards and ship the goods overseas - before either the credit card owner or the online merchant catches on. The goods then are typically sold on the black market. Mules serve two main functions: They help keep goods flowing through a tightly run distribution system, and they insulate their employers from police detection. To document what such a mule goes through, USA TODAY spent five months pursuing leads from law enforcement officials, tech security experts and Internet underground operatives. The probe uncovered fresh evidence detailing how organized crime groups, such as the one that enlisted Karl, operate quietly at the far end of the cybercrime pipeline. (International scam: An inside look at a Nigerian reshipping ring) Savvy thieves often keep such rip-offs below $5,000 to avoid detection from bank monitors and the FBI. But cumulatively, the thefts reach into the hundreds of millions of dollars. While e-mail phishers, hackers and insider thieves grab notoriety for stealing personal and financial data, these reshipping groups put the stolen IDs to use. Security consultant eFunds estimates that reshipping rings set up nearly 44,000 post office boxes and residential addresses in the USA as package-handling points in 2004, up from 5,000 in 2003. And they show no signs of slowing down. The dark side of e-commerce Consumer-level financial fraud has been around since thieves first thought to filch blank checks from mailboxes. The Internet has taken it to a new level, not yet fully understood by the general public. By many measures, 2005 is shaping up as a watershed year for e-commerce - and cybercrime. E-commerce has become so accessible and feature-rich that consumers take it for granted. Banks have made it easy to execute virtually any banking transaction online - from changing a billing address to transferring large sums to another account. And the Web makes it simple to ship and track parcels. Amazon.com alone, celebrating its 10th anniversary, expects to approach revenue of $9 billion this year. And online transactions overall topped $132 billion in 2004, up 39% from 2003 and 154% from 2002, according to VeriSign, the top manager of Internet domain names. No one really knows how much of the estimated $150 billion worth of online transactions this year will be fraudulent, but losses pegged to reshipping scams were estimated at $700 million in 2004, up from $500 million in 2003, according to eFunds. See entire article @ http://biz.yahoo.com/usat/050710/12978968.html?.v=1 This worth reading. |
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This site is now being hosted in CHINA WHOIS results for 211.155.231.243 Generated by www.DNSstuff.com Location: China [City: Beijing, Beijing] ARIN says that this IP belongs to APNIC; I'm looking it up there. Using 0 day old cached answer (or, you can get fresh results). Displaying E-mail address (use sparingly -- this will make it more likely that you will trigger our rate limiting system). % [whois.apnic.net node-1] % Whois data copyright terms http://www.apnic.net/db/dbcopyright.html inetnum: 211.155.224.0 - 211.155.239.255 netname: SRT descr: Hangzhou Silk Road Information Technologies Co.,Ltd. descr: 杭州世导信息技术有限公司 country: CN admin-c: IPAS1-AP admin-c: QL43-AP tech-c: WL169-AP mnt-by: MAINT-CNNIC-AP changed: ipas@cnnic.net.cn 20010117 status: ALLOCATED PORTABLE source: APNIC role: CNNIC IPAS CONFEDERATION address: No.4, Zhongguancun No.4 South Street, address: Haidian District, Beijing country: CN phone: +86-10-62553604 fax-no: +86-10-62559892 e-mail: ipas@cnnic.net.cn admin-c: LW152-AP tech-c: TC30-AP nic-hdl: IPAS1-AP mnt-by: MAINT-CNNIC-AP changed: ipas@cnnic.net.cn 20020910 changed: hm-changed@apnic.net 20040803 source: APNIC person: Qiu LiXia address: Huaxing Technology Bldg. Fl.5, No.477 Wensan Road,Hangzhou, Zhejiang,310012, China country: CN phone: +86-0571-5127666-31 fax-no: +86-0571-5026182 e-mail: dns@srt.com.cn nic-hdl: QL43-AP mnt-by: MAINT-CNNIC-AP changed: ipas@cnnic.net.cn 20010117 source: APNIC person: Wang Linda address: Huaxing Technology Bldg. Fl.5, No.477 Wensan Road,Hangzhou, Zhejiang,310012, China country: CN phone: +86-0571-5127666-31 fax-no: +86-0571-5026182 e-mail: dmnadm@silkroadtechnologies.com nic-hdl: WL169-AP mnt-by: MAINT-CNNIC-AP changed: ipas@cnnic.net.cn 20010117 source: APNIC |
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