create your own

How to Verify Urban Legends and Email Scams

82
rate or flag this page

By embitca


Over the last couple of years there have been dozens of occasions where my mother has shared with me some dire information that she has learned from an email sent to her by a well-meaning friend. Nine times out of 10 the topic of the email message will turn out to be an urban legend.

Actually, now that I think of it, I'm pretty sure that only once has she brought me home a copy of an email warning that turned out to be true. Water can in fact explode in your face if you boil it in the microwave! Sure, it is extremely unlike to happen, and in fact it is only possible if you take the water out of the microwave and hold the cup just under your face, but it can happen.



Urban legends, however, tend to be quite harmless. Sure, they may be a bit of a pain, especially if you are post office employee drowning in millions of greeting cards sent to a kid who recovered from his terminal illness years ago, but hey, at least it keeps people employed! Email scams are an altogether different sort of employment however, the scammy thieving kind.

By now, lots of folks are familiar with the Nigerian email scams, but plenty of others still manage to fall for it, day after day. But letters from foreign dignateries and government lotteries are not the only thing to watch out for in your email.

Be wary of any emails purporting to be coming from places such as Paypal, Amazon, Ebay or your bank. Yes, these places will send you email. No, they will not ask you for your password or any information that can help them access your account.

For safety's sake, simply avoid clicking links in email messages and go and type the website address into your browser instead. Make sure you are running good and up-to-date virus protection software, or even better, run a complete security program on your computer that can prevent against phishing attempts as well.

Also, if it sounds weird, let's face it, it probably isn't true. Do us all a favor and check Snopes first before passing on any forwarded emails to your entire address book, okay? PLEASE! Thank you :)


Get Total Security Online

Bitdefender Total Security 2009 2Yr/3Pc [OLD VERSION] Bitdefender Total Security 2009 2Yr/3Pc [OLD VERSION]
BitDefender is designed to secure your privacy online and prevent identify theft with its phishing protection and File Vault for private information stored on your computer.
Price: $51.76
List Price: $79.95

FBI Cyber Crimes Division
FBI Cyber Crimes Division

Protect Yourself Online

The Wall Street Journal. Complete Identity Theft Guidebook: How to Protect Yourself from the Most Pervasive Crime in America (Wall Street Journal Identity Theft Guidebook: How to Protect) The Wall Street Journal. Complete Identity Theft Guidebook: How to Protect Yourself from the Most Pervasive Crime in America (Wall Street Journal Identity Theft Guidebook: How to Protect)
This Wall Street Journal Guide is short and sweet. It also includes information on what to do if you've already been a victim of identity theft.
Price: $6.84
List Price: $13.95

Email Scams in the News

  • Phony Job Offer Email Scams19 Action News Cleveland3 days ago

    Many people have reported that job offers originating from some of the major employment sites via email are not what they appear to be. These emails have subject lines that sound exciting.

  • The 12 Scams of ChristmasYahoo! Tech Advisors3 days ago

    We're about to enter the holiday shopping season headlong, and while vigilance is always important when you're shopping online, scams and such always seem to get worse during the colder months of the year. As a helpful reminder, our friends at McAfee put together this handy guide to the 12 most common online scams to which the unsuspecting fall prey to at this time of year. Their list follows ...

  • Spam's new flavoursGuardian Unlimited6 hours ago

    Filtering is keeping more unwanted messages from our inboxes – but provoking more sophisticated scams on social networks and elsewhere When Luis von Ahn gives talks on his work fighting spam, he likes to start by asking the audience a question. "How many of you have had to fill out one of those web forms that asks you to read a distorted sequence of letters or a word?" he asks. "How many of you ...

Comments

RSS for comments on this Hub

Zabbella profile image

Zabbella  says:
5 months ago

Thank you for that.

1. In my myspace account, I have gotten bogus people offering friendship etc. I automatically mark it as spam.

2. My sis sent me an e-mail telling me the horrors of baby carrots! I love baby carrots darn it. ( that has got to be a bad urban legend)

Hawkesdream profile image

Hawkesdream  says:
5 months ago

thanks for this, I had one the other day saying that I had won x amount on the e-mail lottery..realized it was a scam, but many wouldn't , they are so convincing.

Submit a Comment

Members and Guests

Sign in or sign up and post using a hubpages account.


optional


  • No HTML is allowed in comments, but URLs will be hyperlinked
  • Comments are not for promoting your hubs or other sites

working