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Be Alert for Cybersecurity Scams as the School Year Begins
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Author: Esther Silver
- Date:
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Associated Services:IT Security Outreach and Training
The link to the IT Security Awareness Quiz is at the end of the article. Everyone who completes the quiz is entered to win one of six $50 Amazon gift cards.
The new school year is an exciting time for learners, faculty, and staff. It’s also an exciting time for hackers, identity thieves, and other unscrupulous types who take advantage of people during this busy time of year. Schools in general already have significant cybersecurity issues and, according to the FTC, this year fraudsters are using the confusion surrounding the Supreme Court decision on student debt relief to launch more scams.
As always, watch out for typical beginning-of-the-school-year scams:
- Emails supposedly containing “a problem with registration”
- Scams specifically designed to cheat learners out of money, such as scholarship scams, fake “tuition payment processors”, textbook rental or book-buying scams, housing scams, tutoring scams, and work-from-home scams
- IRS impersonators demanding that learners or their parents wire money immediately to pay a fake "federal student tax"
- Messages with links to fake login pages
- Messages asking for your login information, no matter how legitimate they may look - nobody other than you needs to know your passwords
- Fake friend requests on social media
- Fake Box or Google Docs notices
How to stay safe:
The best way to avoid scams is to approach all unexpected messages, offers, and phone calls with a healthy skepticism. Helpful habits include:
- Always think twice before clicking on links or opening attachments, even if they look like they're from someone you know. If you’re not sure, contact the sender by a different method you know is legitimate to confirm they sent it (e.g., they send an email, you make a phone call).
- Verify requests for private information. Remember, con artists know how to fake their identities.
- Protect your passwords. Make them long and strong, never reveal them to anyone, and use different passwords for different accounts. Also use multi-factor authentication (MFA) whenever possible.
Additional Information:
- Federal Trade Commission Consumer Information: Did you hear the SCOTUS decision on student loan debt relief? So did scammers.
- IRS: University students and staff should be aware of IRS impersonation email scam
- Fraud.org: Avoid the most common back-to-school scams
- Federal Student Aid: Avoiding Student Aid Scams
- Attorney General: Beware of Scams targeting College and Graduate Students
- Homeland Security: INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS: BE AWARE OF POTENTIAL SCAMMERS
- BBB Tip: Back to school shopping for tech supplies
- Norton: 6 back-to-school scams and how to avoid them
Take the quiz on this article. The prize for passing the quiz is one entry in a drawing for one of six Amazon $50 gift cards.
- Owning Team: IT Security
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Team Lead: Patrick Phelan