Cyber intrusions have been on a rise with cybercrime becoming more
dangerous and sophisticated than ever. The pervasive and evolving
cybercrime poses a serious threat to both the public and private
sector networks as attackers target international organizations to
steal corporate data and individuals are subjected to identity
theft.
In December 2018, Aaron Cole, from the Portland suburb of Oregon
City, fall prey to a wire scam and nearly lost his home after being
duped into making a fraudulent down payment of $123,000. The
attacker sent Cole an email directing him to make the payment and
tricked him into believing that it is from the title company he had
been working with. At the time, Cole did not realize that a
sophisticated network of hackers had been keeping track of his
interactions with the title company. Although the email appeared
similar in structure to the original emails he received from his
title company, it had slight differences.
It was only when the title company reached out Cole on due dates,
asking him to send the money, the realization of the blunder hit
the Oregon man hard. He suddenly realized that he was duped by
cybercriminals to give away all the money which he had saved from
the sale of his former house along with other family savings.
Cole's title company, WFG came to his immediate rescue and made up
for the losses, in turn, Cole is helping the company in spreading
the word about more such scams. He was fortunate to be hired for
the same amount he lost to the hackers - to be a spokesperson at
the National Title Insurance Company.
“They warned we're never going to send you an email with wire
instructions, it'll be an encrypted email. We’ll call you with wire
instructions. They're putting all the red flags out there that they
can possibly think of,” said Cole. “I was looking at it more like
the terms of use when you want to download an app and you just skip
through the thing and you click accept.”
While explaining the unfortunate incident and the state of mind
which followed, the Oregon Husband and father of two said: "It was
the worst feeling."
"And then having to go home and tell my wife that I just gave away
all the money. She could tell right when I walked in the house and
just sat down, and I just couldn't come up with the words to tell
her." He added.
Referencing from the statements given by Gabriel Gundersen, an FBI
supervisory special agent with the Oregon Cyber Task Force, "The
emails have gotten well-crafted and quite detailed. They're highly
tailored to that particular victim."
"It's a social engineering piece, where they're coercing a victim
to do something based on an artificial agenda or an artificial
timeline." He added.
Earlier the attempts made by attackers to dupe people were
uncoordinated and clumsily executed due to which individuals had a
scope of making distorted sense of anything which strikes them as
strange and makes them feel uncomfortable, however now these cyber
traps are set sophisticatedly making it difficult for individuals
to locate the red flags.
Security officers are in a constant race with the attackers,
ensuring they are not lacking behind with the fixes for every new
approach slammed in by con men. However, the overall impact is
still staggering as crucial systems are bypassed, disrupting the
entire functioning of vital medical and banking networks.