FBI Warning—Delete These Texts On Your iPhone, Android Phone - Retarded pajeets continue to try to buttfuck your grandma.

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The FBI warns a threat moving across America “from state to state" targets citizens via malicious SMS (smishing) texts, teling iPhone, Android users to “delete any smishing texts received.” Now cybercriminals have registered “over 10,000 domains” to fuel a new wave of attacks. These new texts are easy to detect — delete them right away.

The new report comes via Palo Alto Networks’ Unit 42. The new campaign, it says, “entices users to reveal personal and/or financial information, including credit or debit card and account information.” The original threat focuses on toll scams, with state-specific payment links; the new set of domains adds delivery services into the mix.


The toll scam has been generating headlines in recent months, with rarely a week passing by without a new report from state or local media somewhere in America. The FTC warns that “not only is the scammer trying to steal your money, but if you click the link, they could get your personal info and even steal your identity.”

All the smishing texts follow a similar pattern. You have an unpaid bill and need to pay it urgently to avoid higher costs or worse. There is a link to the payment site — which is where the new domains come into play. Given iMessage blocks such links, the texts include instructions to either reply or copy the link into Safari to make payment.

The toll scam is franchised out to local operators, but it all seems to leverage a toolkit built by Chinese cybercrime groups. Little surprise maybe that the example root domains and fully qualified domain names shared by Unit 42 all share the Chinese .XIN TLD. You can easily see how these domain names are crafted to entice a click:
  • dhl.com-new[.]xin
  • driveks.com-jds[.]xin
  • ezdrive.com-2h98[.]xin
  • ezdrivema.com-citations-etc[.]xin
  • ezdrivema.com-securetta[.]xin
  • e-zpassiag.com-courtfees[.]xin
  • e-zpassny.com-ticketd[.]xin
  • fedex.com-fedexl[.]xin
  • getipass.com-tickeuz[.]xin
  • sunpass.com-ticketap[.]xin
  • thetollroads.com-fastrakeu[.]xin
  • usps.com-tracking-helpsomg[.]xin
This list is not exhaustive, but it will help you flag threats. It also goes without saying that any U.S. toll payment platform or major delivery service is not going to redirect you to a Chinese domain from a link within a text, even where there’s a “.COM” earlier in the string. But even if the link does not have a telltale Chinese TLD, you should not click through from a text. As the bureau says, "check your account using the toll service’s legitimate website [or] contact the toll service’s customer service phone number.”

Per Bleeping Computer, toll payment scam campaigns continue to spread, making it quite clear why so many new domains are required. “A massive wave of phishing text messages has caused numerous cities throughout the US to issue warnings, including from Annapolis, Boston, Greenwich, Denver, Detroit, Houston, Milwaukee, Salt Lake City, Charlotte, San Diego, San Francisco, and many others.”

In addition to the top-level domain, Bleeping Computer also noticed in a text they received in New York “a tell-tale sign that this is a scam, as the dollar sign is displayed after the amount, rather than before, as is customary in the U.S. This further indicates that the phishing scam was created by people outside of the U.S.”

McAfee has now issued its own warning, highlighting the cities most targeted by these scams. “Look both ways for a new form of scam that’s on the rise, especially if you live in Dallas, Atlanta, Los Angeles, Chicago, or Orlando — fake toll road scams. They’re the top five cities getting targeted by scammers.”

The team reports “a major uptick in them over the past few weeks; fake toll road scams have nearly quadrupled at the end of February compared to where they were in January." Their full list of most targeted cities is here:

  1. "Dallas, Texas
  2. Atlanta, Georgia
  3. Los Angeles, California
  4. Chicago, Illinois
  5. Orlando, Florida
  6. Miami, Florida
  7. San Antonio, Texas
  8. Las Vegas, Nevada
  9. Houston, Texas
  10. Denver, Colorado
  11. San Diego, California
  12. Phoenix, Arizona
  13. Seattle, Washington
  14. Indianapolis, Indiana
  15. Boardman, Ohio
These unpaid toll scam warnings are fast becoming a daily occurrence, prompting Louisiana Attorney General Liz Murrill to issue a direct message to citizens in the state, after being targeted herself. “I received this text as well. It is a scam. If you ever receive a text that looks suspicious, be sure to never click on it. You don’t want your private information stolen by scammers,” she warned.

Just as with the report from Unit 42, state officials advise that the link included in the message is a telltale danger sign, illustrating why carefully selected domains are critical to the attacks.“Web addresses that come from the scammers will include a hyphen in the address, such as geauxpass-la.com or one that is misspelled by one letter such as leaving out an 'X’ in GeauxPass. The wrong web addresses are https//geaupass.net or https://geauxpass-la.com. The correct web address to access your GeauxPass account and to contact the customer service team is www.geauxpass.com.”

Meanwhile in Detroit, one news outlet decided to put feelers out across the city to check how viral a scam this scam had become locally. “Has your phone been blowing up with texts about unpaid toll bills? Mine sure has, and the same is true for many of us at 7 News Detroit. I decided to ask about it on the WXYZ Facebook page, and we got more than 4,300 comments from people across Michigan and others out of state.”

The new team warns of a nasty new trick being deployed by the attackers; when one local woman “tried to pay using her debit card, [she] got a pop-up indicating the card was denied. That’s the trick! The scammers want you to keep trying different cards, so they have those numbers to use themselves.”

Other warnings this week gave come from Virgina and Maryland, Indiana, North Carolina, Georgia and Ohio.

The FBI’s advice for anyone falling foul to these scams is very simple:

  1. “File a complaint with the IC3, www.ic3.gov, [and include] the phone number from where the text originated [and] the website listed within the text
  2. Check your account using the toll service's legitimate website.
  3. Contact the toll service's customer service phone number.
  4. Delete any smishing texts received.
  5. If you clicked any link or provided your information, take efforts to secure your personal information and financial accounts. Dispute any unfamiliar charges.”
The FTC advices broadly the same:

  • Don’t click on any links in, or respond to, unexpected texts. Scammers want you to react quickly, but it’s best to stop and check it out.
  • Check to see if the text is legit. Reach out to the state’s tolling agency using a phone number or website you know is real — not the info from the text.
  • Report and delete unwanted text messages. Use your phone’s “report junk” option to report unwanted texts to your messaging app or forward them to 7726 (SPAM). Once you’ve checked it out and reported it, delete the text.”
Zimperium has just warned that cybercriminals are moving to a “mobile-first attack strategy,” because you are more vulnerable on small screen devices. It’s easy to see why that’s the case, and why you’re more likely to click on a text than an email — don’t.
 
I actually received a text from them. Never fallen for that shit.
My only regret was not texting back with "Please saaar help me im fucking Indian"
Never do this shit because you'll be added to a list of numbers that responded. Same goes with replying to telemarketers etc
 
Why do we need a separate subcategory for phishing through the phone? The word they have chosen is awful and I only started hearing it this week and I'm already sick of it.
 
This is why old people need parental locks on their phones so they can’t clic these things in sketchy text messages.
As someone with an old family member who constantly has problems with their phone - unironically this.

I'm trying to figure out how to retard-proof his phone so he can do the stuff he needs, and can't do the stuff he doesn't need.
 
Phones need an Elderly Mode where it just silently deletes texts from any number not in contacts.
You should be able to set this up actually, on Android anyway. Automatically ignore calls and SMS messages from users not in the contact list. I did this on my grandfather's phone and it worked great, sadly this is (for some reason) impossible to do on WhatsApp and other platforms.
 
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You should be able to set this up actually, on Android anyway. Automatically ignore calls and SMS messages from users not in the contact list. I did this on my grandfather's phone and it worked great, sadly this is (for some reason) impossible to do on WhatsApp and other platforms.
Yeah and iPhone has similar - but they still do appear if you poke around.

A dirty secret for iPhone is that it can be shared with an iPad - so texts appear on both - and you could delete from the iPad the bad ones. Could be worthwhile for an elderly parent, but then you’d also be exposed to all their nursing home sexting.
 
lol I’ve gotten a ton of these. It’s fun to read through them and look at the broken english, especially the lack of indefinite articles. “Ello saar, toll road team wishes you great day!”
If we actually had a competent government that cared about its citizens they could probably mostly solve the scammer problem in less than a year
Just take away all internet access from the Indians. After doing that you may find out something that some would consider “racist”…
 
I've been getting one to two of these texts a day for the last week. If I had my way every person involved in these scams would be crucified publicly and their families made to drive the nails in.
 
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I actually received a text from them. Never fallen for that shit.
My only regret was not texting back with "Please saaar help me im fucking Indian"
My understanding is ANY reply back helps to flag the number they're calling from as "safe for mass texting." I guess the idea is spammers won't get responses but legitimate numbers will?
 
Any young people falling for it need to take a mental competence test.
I am genuinely taken aback by how many younger people I've encountered get duped by this shit. Scams were nowhere near as prevelant when I was a kid, and I could sniff this shit out around the time I hit the double digits. These rookie scams have such an air of incompetence to them that you should be insulted they even tried if you have two brain cells to rub together. A good scam where you don't realize it until it's too late is fuckin' 1 in a million.
 
I got two in the past two days, which is hilarious because I don't own a car. Wanted to text back "please Saar send bob and vagene" but I'm dumb enough to not know if texting them back would give them something to work with.
 
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