Crosswords2 mins ago
Bank Account Hacks
12 Answers
I know its becoming a real problem that bank accounts can be hacked, by slimey hackers these days. I blame the banks themselves.
I am aware of someone who had an account hacked a couple of weeks back via Barclays Pingit Account.
The victim doesn't bank with Barclays, but the scammer managed to open a Pingit account, in the victim's name, and draw money from the victim's own Bank account.. straight into the new Barclays Pingit account.
I'm sure the banks in their wisdom are making it far to easy to transfer cash, any time anywhere, via a mobile phone, it's ludicrous.
Maybe time to stash the cash under the mattress!
I am aware of someone who had an account hacked a couple of weeks back via Barclays Pingit Account.
The victim doesn't bank with Barclays, but the scammer managed to open a Pingit account, in the victim's name, and draw money from the victim's own Bank account.. straight into the new Barclays Pingit account.
I'm sure the banks in their wisdom are making it far to easy to transfer cash, any time anywhere, via a mobile phone, it's ludicrous.
Maybe time to stash the cash under the mattress!
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by cupotee2. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.If the fraudster opened an account with Barclays they would have needed to meet identity procedures. So this sounds more like identity theft than Bank hacking as the info they would have required would not have appeared on the victims on line account. Once they have the account open and the account number of the existing Bank account, transferring funds would have been straightforward.
This is why it is so important not to put any information in the public domain, odd are it will be used.
I do all my on line Banking from home on a non wireless connection and would never use a mobile phone or internet in a public place.
This is why it is so important not to put any information in the public domain, odd are it will be used.
I do all my on line Banking from home on a non wireless connection and would never use a mobile phone or internet in a public place.
Yes we have ubasses and indeed they are. Entrance is by key or fob but they quite often go wrong and the door doesn't close properly. The first we know is when a resident finds a credit card has been taken out in their name, or a loan has been taken out, or their bank statement doesn't appear when it should, and so on. They have targeted our area twice in about 3-4 years. The police believe it is a large well organised gang working out of SE London.
-- answer removed --
Yes your right ubasses, the persons identity was stolen..the banks tell the victim these scammers use an unregistered phone sim that they ditch as soon as the deed it done, so untraceable.
It didn't stop there as the scammers then went on to try opening other accounts in the persons name using different combinations as in Mrs ** Ms** but, by now the bank were watching this address and intercepted.
I don't leave my details online..but many online companies keep your card numbers unless you delete, every time. Amazon and M&S & Tesco are 3 that come to mind.
It didn't stop there as the scammers then went on to try opening other accounts in the persons name using different combinations as in Mrs ** Ms** but, by now the bank were watching this address and intercepted.
I don't leave my details online..but many online companies keep your card numbers unless you delete, every time. Amazon and M&S & Tesco are 3 that come to mind.
Related Questions
Sorry, we can't find any related questions. Try using the search bar at the top of the page to search for some keywords, or choose a topic and submit your own question.