Saturday, 30 April 2011
Facebook - "how you'll look in 20 years" Potential Scam
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Have you gotten a Facebook Chat message that links to a site that purports to show you an age-progression of how you'll look in 20 years? It could be a scam.
judging from comments posted by Facebook users, it may be spreading via both Facebook Chat and wall posts. The message users are receiving is as follows:
"haha did you see this yet? it's pretty funny... see what you look like 20 years older, mine is HILARIOUS :) [link redacted] whoops sorry meant to send that to someone else :P"
When you click the link in the message, it'll apparently post the above message to your wall or send it to friends via Facebook Chat, thus spreading it to others. It's hard to say for sure if this possible scam is collecting personal information, but you should assume that your account has been compromised, especially if another site asks you for your Facebook login information.
We'll update this story with additional information if we learn any more about this latest scam. If you've encountered this scam or ones like it, let us know in the comments below.
Via: PCworld
judging from comments posted by Facebook users, it may be spreading via both Facebook Chat and wall posts. The message users are receiving is as follows:
"haha did you see this yet? it's pretty funny... see what you look like 20 years older, mine is HILARIOUS :) [link redacted] whoops sorry meant to send that to someone else :P"
When you click the link in the message, it'll apparently post the above message to your wall or send it to friends via Facebook Chat, thus spreading it to others. It's hard to say for sure if this possible scam is collecting personal information, but you should assume that your account has been compromised, especially if another site asks you for your Facebook login information.
Protect Yourself
First and foremost, you should not click any links that seem even remotely suspicious, even if they're from people you know and trust. If you did click on a malicious link, however, you should change your Facebook password immediately. If you use the same password you use for Facebook for other sites (say, your Ebay account), you should change that too to be safe (in general, you shouldn't use the same password for multiple sites).We'll update this story with additional information if we learn any more about this latest scam. If you've encountered this scam or ones like it, let us know in the comments below.
Via: PCworld
This post was written by: Rahul Singh
Rahul Singh is a Tech lover and Blogger, who loves Gadgets and Technology. You Can Follow him on Twitter or Contact him