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  • Hello there. Who am I? I'm here to get your information. I'm a cyber criminal.

  • You'll never see me, and you'll wish you had never responded to my emails. I'm

  • here to warn you about phishing. And not the kind of where you get fish, but the

  • "p–⁠h" kind: "phishing". Cyber criminals. I will send you an email, or

  • a text message about your Amazon delivery that you've been waiting for,

  • or I will be your bank telling you that somebody has used your access card, or

  • your credit card company telling you that there have been some strange

  • activities on your account. But I'm not really your bank, I'm not really Amazon

  • — I am a cyber criminal. This is how I do it. I will send you an email or a

  • text message. And I will get you to open the magical link that I send with my

  • email. Once you open that link, you will enter in your information, and I will

  • steal it from you. Or I could be a sexy boy or girl on Facebook, and I could

  • want all of your love and attention. We could have chats. You could send me some

  • pictures. I could send you some pictures. I could also look into your

  • Facebook profile, and find all of your brothers, and sisters, and moms, and

  • dads. And I could send those beautiful pictures to them, unless you pay me

  • money. If you pay me moneydon't worry, naughty boys and girls — I won't

  • send those pictures to your beloved family, but you're going to have to pay

  • me a lot of money. Empty out your bank accounts. I'm on Instagram. I'm sending

  • you fake things about paid partnerships. Oh, if you give me your information, I

  • will send you links and money; you can have free products. If only you give me

  • your information. Give me your bank account number. Let me deposit something

  • into your account. Did I say: "deposit"? I meant: "withdraw". I will send you

  • attachments. In these attachments, you will have to re-enter your login

  • information. I am Facebook, and I say: "Oh, can you please re-enter your

  • Facebook password and account information for me? Just one more time;

  • it's fine." And then I steal it all. I have all of your Facebook access. I know

  • everything about you. Everything you've put on Facebook; even the things you've

  • hidden. I know everything. Why? Because you gave me permission to do it.

  • I am the government, and I'm calling you on a very important matter. I am

  • pretending to be the government, and I'm telling you that you have done something

  • very wrong, or someone has used your information and done something

  • illegally. But you are the one that's going to go to jail. Please press number

  • one on your phone to speak directly to a government agent. Give them your

  • information, and everything will be okay. You won't go to jail. Oh no. Your

  • bank will call you and ask you for your bank account number; and just for

  • verification, your password. That's not your bank. It's me. I'm here to steal

  • your identity. I'm your grandchild or part of your family. I've had a car

  • accident. And I need money. -"Mom, please! I'm in a car accident! I... I...

  • I need money. I need to pay for the car. I don't... Can you please send me money?

  • Please, please, please, please, please, Mom! It's terrible!" -"Oh, okay. Just

  • give me, you know... Just... here." Don't be fooled. If your family calls

  • you, make sure it's the number they're calling you from. You never know what's

  • lurking behind this mask. You never know who's calling you. Is a computer company

  • calling you because you have a virus or a problem, and they want you to take

  • over your computer? Don't be fooled when the phone rings. (phone ringing) "Hello?

  • Oh, the Canadian Revenue Agency. Yes, the taxes. Yes. Mm-hmm. Oh, I'm sorry.

  • Hold on. If I don't tell you information now, I'm... I'm... I'm going to go to

  • jail? Someone has used my... my social? My work number? Someone's used my... my

  • identity. Yes. Wow, okay. I'll press one. Okay." Oh my god. So, hold on. I'm

  • just on hold now. So, it seems that the government's calling me because

  • somebody's used my identity. And then that they... "Oh, hello? Hello. Yes,

  • yes. Yes. Name. My name's Ronnie. 'R–o–n⁠–n–i–⁠e'⁠. McCracken, last name:

  • 'M–⁠a–⁠C–⁠c–⁠r–a⁠–c–k–⁠e–n'. Yeah, Ronnie McCracken. Yeah, my bank number,

  • yes. My bank account number is: three, eight, seven, nine, three, eight, two.

  • Yeah, the password... the password for my bank account is..." Ha-ha. Not in

  • your life, buddy.

  • Be careful! Don't give out information on the phone. Don't be stupid. If

  • somebody's pretending to be the government is calling you on your phone,

  • and they ask you for your namegive them a fake one. This happens to me a

  • lot, and I kind of get a little bit excited when I see this fake call coming

  • in. And it's always a computer: "We are calling you from the Canadian

  • government. Your SIN number" — which means your work number — "has been used

  • against you. You will go to jail if you do not respond to the call. Please press

  • one", so you press one. And they want your... they need to check your

  • information. So, they check your name and your postal code, but they have your

  • postal code. And I... I... my job, my hobby is to see how far I can get them

  • until they hang up. If you give them the fake name, like: "Ronnie McCracken",

  • they're gonna hang up. Or if you say bad words to them, or you give them fake

  • information, they're gonna know and they're gonna hang up right away. The

  • longest I've gotten them was he told me his special ID number, and I didn't

  • write it down. He knew I didn't write it down and he hung up on me. But let's

  • make this your new hobby. And you can practice your English. It's great. So,

  • if somebody calls you and pretends to be the government because, you know what?

  • The government doesn't call you; they'll... they won't even email you

  • because they're so slow. They'll send you a mail. A letter in the mail, which

  • is ages, so don't worry about the government calling you. And they will

  • ask for your bank account number, o stuff like that. Don't give it to them.

  • Come on. Don't be stupid. No.

  • Surprise! I'm here to tell you about how to protect yourself. I'm Ronnie. I'm not

  • a cyber killer of your information. I'm not a cyber criminal. I'm here to help

  • you. So, three easy things you can do to protect yourself against these terrible

  • people: Don't answer the phone, get off of social media, and go live in a hole.

  • Nah. First, you should update all of your software. Why? When you update your

  • software, it's going to give you the latest security fixes. So, if there was

  • a problem and hackers were able to get into something, companies update their

  • software, and they fix the problem. So, these updates should be quite frequently

  • once a week, maybe once a monthevery company is different. The next

  • thing isand I see this all the time on my phone, and I'm going to do it when

  • I've finished the lessonit says: "Enable two-factor authentication". What

  • this means is you have a password, but also something like facial recognition,

  • or a fingerprint, or a pattern to help identify yourself. So, even if the

  • hackers get your password, they're not going to have the other thing that you

  • need to keep your account safe. So, two things are stronger than one thing. And

  • the last one is... Oh, those passwords. How do you remember them all? But you

  • should create unique passwords. That means that each account you have should

  • probably have a different password. Don't use: "Password123" for all of your

  • accounts. You can use my password, which is www.Englishwithronnie.com if you want

  • to, for your bank accounts. They recommend 12 characters. That's a lot.

  • Characters can be numbers, letters, and symbols. They all have these funky

  • symbols. So, they recommend a mixture of both; not just www.englishwithronnie.com

  • for your private lessonsmy passwordbut a mixture of everything. Maybe

  • englishwithronnie.com6970. I'm not too sure what that would be, but protect

  • yourselves, people. Be very careful what emails you're opening, who you're

  • talking to on the phone, and just generally protect yourself and all your

  • savings. Be safe out there. Bye-bye.

Hello there. Who am I? I'm here to get your information. I'm a cyber criminal.

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A2 初級

Identity Theft, Phishing, and Hacking: BE CAREFUL!

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    Summer に公開 2021 年 10 月 25 日
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