Tuesday, March 7, 2017

Email spam and scams are commonplace in this modern world that we live in. So common place in fact that in today's world it is more uncommon for someone to have never seen one of these scams then it is for someone who has seen them. Nearly all of them either seem very harmless on the surface (you've won something, chain letters, or even promises of huge savings are all perfect examples). Today's blog is going to first divulge into some common email and phone scams and the threat that they can cause you. From there I'll discuss a few tools that could help you should you come across any of these scenarios and finally I'll end with telling you about a situation where someone very close to me almost fell into one of these traps. 

Social Engineering is a form of scamming that preys on the vulnerabilities of the human mind. People by nature are weak to certain triggers, especially in realms that they have little understanding of. Tell someone that their computer has a virus, and they panic. By and large people do not understand what a virus looks like on their computer, only that it’s bad. So you tell them they have one and they are that much likely to give up whatever information they have to make the problem disappear. Even if the problem never existed in the first place. 

There are many types of scams that exist in the wide web today. As we quickly as we learn to recognize one type another grander, more clever, smarter scheme is being cooked up to replace it. However smart we are, they are smarter. However if you learn to recognize patterns, you should be able to protect yourself from these nefarious people who are out to do you harm. 


The above website lists some of the most common internet scams you could come across. As well as some ways in which you can avoid falling into these well-known traps. 

The Foreign Lottery Scam

This is one of the most common forms of scam. People live their entire lives waiting for something good to happen to them. This preys on that mentality of people. By telling them they are super lucky and won something you prey on hope and joy. People then give you the information you want under the guise that you are giving them the information to send you money. You play right into their hands. 

Chain Letters

These may seem like more of an annoyance then anything but I feel like they are worth noting here. "Send this to _ many friends and something wonderful will happen.” We've all see them at least once in our lives. On the surface they seem fairly harmless. A silly little game to play among friends. In truth however every time you forward one of these emails you  put every person you email at risk of being added to a large Email group, that can then be sold to other companies and the spam continues in droves. Only once and you head down the rabbit hole. 

Bank Breech Confirmation

Another very common scam, again preying on the weakness of the human mind. Your bank, the place where you keep your money, has been breached.  They need you to sign into your bank in order to validate your credentials and secure your information. They even provide a link to your bank site. Except the bank site is a fake and you've just given them all your bank information. 

There are many other types of phishing scams that pray on the unsuspecting and the seemingly weak. I could go into many more examples but I think that it could take me an entire day to do so. However the following couple of sites have a myriad of other examples for your information purposes.


So, you now know how to field out a few of the email scams that are floating around today. That’s great. But what about the hundreds of other scams you don’t know about? How do you arm yourself against those? Can you arm yourself against those? Sure you can! I’m going to talk about a few steps and tricks that you can look at while you evaluate whether that email is real or trying to scam you.

1)      Your first line of defense is actually your simplest. Use your own common sense. If something seems too good to be true, nine times out of ten it probably is. If something seems like it is crazy overstated, don’t trust it. Verify by your own means. Human beings are equipped with a miraculous sense to not trust something that isn’t true. Survival. Use that to your advantage.
2)      Look at the sender of the email. Does it come from an individual? Does the email domain seem overly generic (such as Gmail, or yahoo?). Companies will rarely send you an email from an individual person. Companies also often have their own domain for their emails. Look for an email that ‘looks’ official.

3)      Be wary of links in emails. If you hover over a link you can see the true path that link is headed to? Does that new pathway seem legitimate? You can never truly be 100% sure that a link is really what you want, but the link should start with the place that you are headed. Ex amazon.com can have other pathways after this, but it should not be secure.amazon.com. The only way to 100% guarantee that you are going to the right place is to type the address yourself into your browser.
Another few resources to keep in mind are snopes.com and hoaxbuster.cciac.org which allows you to look up emails to find out if they are on a list of well-known hoaxes and scams. You can also forward the email to spam@uce.gov, which will not allow you to prevent the emails from coming in, but will allow the (blank) to get a better grasp on the scams that are out there.

I’m going to leave you with a personal story from my life. One scam, the scam about someone being stuck in Nigeria, hit very near to me once. I have a cousin, his name is Ryan, and generally we don’t speak about him much. He is pretty much the scum of the bottom, cocaine addict, has three children, all different mothers, he abandoned his wife and all of his kids. Fell off the grid. I don’t tell you any of this for revenge or sympathy, it’s important to this story because he is the very kind of person who would go over to Nigeria, strike up some shady deal, and get stuck there.

So when my grandmother, the only person in my family who still would give Ryan the time of day, got a phone call saying that Ryan (yes, they got that specific) was stuck in Nigeria and needed money to get home. She fell for it, and hard. She went to everyone she could to get help as well (thankfully, because we were able to get her to rationalize things and go to the police rather than sending money blindly). Ours is a story that could have gone very sour very fast.


They prey on this, giving you directed information, very specific to you. They do their research. Always verify with an outside source anything that requires you to give information about yourself or your bank account. Remember guys, use common sense, be smart, and you’ll be just fine!

Sunday, February 12, 2017

Hey Guys, Lindsey here again! today I'm going to talk about and reflect on the concept of Cyber Security with regards to Cyber Stalking and Identity theft. First I'll take you through some of the videos and articles that we found in class and then I'll talk about a few more interesting Articles I found on my own as well. 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9nEwX7BUYdY&feature=youtu.be

In this modern day and age most people at least know something about computers. We live in an age where technology is as common as the food you eat and the clothes you were. A vast majority of people have touched some form of technology, Computers, Cellphones, tablets. Even Airline tickets and checkouts at grocery shops are gaining further and further access to computer technology.

But how much do people know about cyber security? Surprisingly even in today's day and age Cyber Security and Securing yourself over the internet is a large dark veil to which very few people have the ability to see and understand. People hear about Identity Theft and Cybercrime on nearly a daily basis. It is vast problem that everyone knows exists, but nobody truly understands. After all, it can't happen to me right?

After watching this video it speaks to me as to just how easy it is for hackers and thieves to con you into giving them everything they need to get in. To leech off of you. Every bit of information you give someone online is up for them to twist and use to their advantage. This is eye opening and scary.

I think in the future I will be more conscientious of what information I give the people online. A big take-away I get from this is not to trust anyone online. Not to the extent of being rude or unkind, but to the point of nobody needs your email, nobody needs your login credentials. Anything that people say to you is suspect. If it seems too good to be true it probably is. Trust your instincts.





This article was probably gave me the most food for thought. I think deep down a part of me, just like a part of everyone else, knows that we are being tracked on the internet. I don’t think anyone really truly understood the extent to which this tracking was taking place. That every search, every email, every click of a button is being tracked not only in general but to you specifically.

From experience I always knew something like this was happening. For example, my friend from work was going to have a baby boy. A few months before her baby shower I went on to Amazon (yes, the great and all powerful convenient Amazon.) to search for a baby show gift. For a few months after that I found myself barraged with advertisements for baby stuff on not only Amazon but on many other sites as well. It was amazing to me that 1 single search on Amazon could cause me to have Baby Ads absolutely everywhere.

I’m not sure how I feel about this. In some way I really don’t think I mind. If they aren’t using my browsing habits for nefarious reasons then I don’t really care to be fair. But I am concerned about their need to hide the fact that they are tracking us. If they are hiding this from us, what else are they hiding from us? Are they really ONLY using our information that they collected to enhance our experience as well as their business? Or is there something darker, something more nefarious going on behind the scenes? Are they reading our emails? Tracking our business? Are we reaching an age of Big Brother watching our every move?

The truth is, without them telling us why they are tracking us, we can only venture and guess at the true reasons. We can’t possibly know with 100% accuracy what exactly they are using our searching habits for.






This article is a highly interesting read about the truth around the laws that pertain to cyber stalking and online harassment. There are laws out there to help prevent the harassment and stalking of victims on a cyber stalking level, but they are right now better in theory then actual practice. It is really hard for the victims to actually act on these laws.

Certain victims, such as the case of Jennifer Lawerence, have the funds and the means to really take the law and make it their own. But for some victims this really isn’t an option. Taking the offender to court takes a lot of time and a lot of effort. As well as a lot of money and resources that some women just do not have.

In an age where the average person basically needs to use the internet to survive in modern society, the laws around the wild, wild internet really need to be revisited and revised. A way for not only women, but for all people to start feeling safe online. No one should have to feel violated just for using the technology that the world has deemed necessary.

 












The internet, is a place that is both a blessing and a curse. It can be used for so much good, or it can be used for dark and nefarious purposes. At the end of the day, how it is used is up to you. Be smart, use caution, and think with your intuition first and you can truly use the marvelous gift that we have at our fingertips with relative safety. Every good choice is one less bad. Think Smart, Be Safe. 

Saturday, January 28, 2017

Our Digital Footprint. How much are we responsible to know, and should employers use this information in employment opportunities?

Its time for Take two! Today we will get more in depth with the things that we have been learning. This weeks focus has been predominantly on our presence online and being aware of how much the information we put online can be used against us if someone truly had malicious intent. It really made me think about my life and how much technology really is both a blessing and a curse.

Technology has the power to save the world, as someone who works for the medical supply company industry, I have seen first hand just how much technology has the power to save people with information and procedures that once upon a time was completely unfathomable. However, on the other hand, for every good person in this world who would use the technology for good, you have another person who would use that same technology for malicious intent. To stalk, to trail, to steal, and even in some cases to murder.

It is our duty and right as citizens of the digital world to teach every person the right and just way to use the gift they have. To make sure that all people in the world have the same access and knowledge to use the technology that in this crazy hectic world isn't only useful it is completely common place. Businesses, schools, places of employment, and even in your own home. At some point or another every person will have to face a computer and more.

Looking through the Nine Themes of Digital Citizenship (located here: http://www.digitalcitizenship.net/Nine_Elements.html ) I had to determine which elements where closest and dearest to my heart.

The first one that stuck out to me immediately is Digital Access. I know I've said this a few times now but I work in a company that builds medical devices, which is very important to this topic for me. Our pump is one of the very first smart pumps. Its designed in such a way to eliminate as the human factor in medical care. That brings me to how any of this actually relates to to Digital Access. We have an amazing product designed to save and sustain lives. All people should have access to this. All people should have the right to technology that can save lives. But even in the modern world, they simply don't. Technology is far too expensive for the third world countries of the world. Right now my work is trying to address that. We are attempting to create a simpler, as well as a less expensive pump with Latin America in mind. One company doing this cannot change the world, but one company is a start.

 Digital Law is something that is very near and dear to my personal life. Its common knowledge that I am a student here at NCCC earning an associates in Computer Information Systems. Its also common knowledge that I am an engineering technician working on an IV pump. What isn't common knowledge is that I am also a staff member for an Anime forum site called Menewsha. I work as both a pixel artist and a moderator who makes sure our collection of roughly 400 users behaves. It is unfortunately here that I have first hand access with people who have less then honorable intentions. We have dealt with anything from people wanting to role play child rape (don't worry we have zero tolerance for this) to people who steal artwork of other people and try and pass it off as their own. The laws that govern society should govern the world of the Internet but unfortunately this isn't always the case. Chasing someone down who stole art from someone else, or who tried to con someone out of their items is hard work. Because that person is likely nothing but an enigma to begin with.

I'm going to go with something related to absolutely everyone for the third theme. Communication. In this day and age virtually everyone has communicated via an electronic device at least once. This is one of the areas that is both the biggest tool we have in our arsenal, with companies being able to span nearly the entire world. It is also where the biggest risks of the internet world are located. People prey on the trusting nature that is human. From personal experience, I work with people literally all over the world. We have branches in Medina. New York, Deerfield, Illinois, Miami, Florida, and also a branch in Chenai over in India. For us this would never be possible without having that capability to communicate digitally. (Here is an interesting article about the pros and cons of digital communication : http://www.geekadelphia.com/2015/10/14/the-pros-and-cons-of-online-communication-in-the-workplace/ )

The last thing I will address today is this article here : http://bluevaletgj2o.pbworks.com/f/Employers+and+Facebook.pdf

I think I can see the truth in both sides of this argument, you should go into anything you put online with the thought that it will forever be there for anyone to see. That being said I agree more with what Timothy had said more. Greg did make some very interesting points that I think need to be addressed. He made a point that people portray themselves online as they want people to see them. There is many reasons that people do this. They may want to seem cooler, sexier, and overall more appealing.

When put this way it would seem like nothing we put online can really be considered valid enough for an employer, however a recent study has shown that people are most honest on social networking sites. People are less honest on anonymous chat sites or sexual sites, but how likely is an employer to find you on one of these sites? In the end if they are checking for you on a social network site, chances are they have a better chance at seeing the real you.

(Information about the honesty of people online can be found here : https://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/close-encounters/201609/is-everyone-really-lying-online )

Monday, January 23, 2017

Talk is Cheap (Free actually) Get Your Blog Account Here!

Hi Guys!

My name is Lindsey Jennings, but you can just call me Lindsey. I've always wanted to start my own blog but I never really knew how to do it. I learned something new today! Learning something new is always a bonus in my books.

So I guess the purpose of this first blog is pretty much to let you guys know my experience and my expectations for the class. When it comes to blogging my experience is zero, maybe that's a little sad in this day and age, maybe its not. My experience with computers however is nothing to sneer at.

This is my second degree, I already have an associates in liberal arts, but my life dragged me into the world of computers and software and I never looked back. Right now I work as an Engineering Technician, specializing in sofware testing for a company that builds IV Pumps. My area of expertise is the Wireless Networking.

So then what does any of this have to do with my expectations for this class? Well, I'm hoping to expand upon my knowledge base in the area of cyber security. This is a really big hot button item in the medical supply world as recently one of our competitors had one of their products shut down just because someone discovered that they COULD be hacked. No one ever actually maliciously attacked them.

I'm looking forward to the class, and I'll see y'all around!