The Office of the Ministry of Internal Affairs for the Cybercrime Crime Council warned about the appearance of a new fraudulent scheme in Wildberries, within the framework of which the attackers use a false site of an existing action of WildBerries and T2, the department published in the Telegram channel of the department said.
Author:
https://rb.ru/author/kossakovskaya-astasiya/
Subscribe to RB.ru on Telegram
“The new Wildberries fines scheme, for the implementation of the scammers simply changed the existing action of WB and T2 Mobile, placing it in a false domain of gift works. In the original action (already completed), users needed to connect the Internet in the home from T2 to obtain a WildBerries certificate of 4 thousand rubles, “is deduced from the UBK Ministry of Internal Affairs.
With a false link, the market client is invited to log in to Wildberries in their account and provide the scammers access to the personal account, the department said.
The Wildberries press service responded to the message of the Ministry of Internal Affairs, saying that the appeal indicated in the publication of the department was “identified and immediately blocked by the market security service.” The company recalled that last year, the United WildBerries and Russ company has identified and blocked more than 3 thousand Phishing resources that imitated the market website.
Previously, on January 29, the attackers pirate Ozon’s support service on the Vkontakte social network and launched a Phishing bulletin on the drawing of prizes and cash. In particular, to obtain an “award” for an amount of more than 250 thousand rubles, users were invited to pay the “rate”. Customers who cross the link lost money.
Author:
Anastasia Kossakovskaya
Source: RB

I am a professional journalist and content creator with extensive experience writing for news websites. I currently work as an author at Gadget Onus, where I specialize in covering hot news topics. My written pieces have been published on some of the biggest media outlets around the world, including The Guardian and BBC News.