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Thousands Of Users Thrashed By Extremely Real-looking-Fake-Scans Scam



Thousands of users have encountered a severe threat from scammers who are employing cunning use of JavaScript and HTML codes by way of “Potentially Unwanted Applications”.

A major security researching organization uncovered a recent development in the scamming area where PUAs and POAs are being employed.

These scams could be categorized as tech-support scams which primarily work on scaring the victim into doing something unforeseen by the victim themselves.

After fake-calls, potentially unwanted applications have become quite common, but the latest twist is the shrewd usage of JavaScript and HTML code.

These codes specifically work on making the fake scans seem implausibly real, making it faster and easier for the scanners to fool their prey.

The well-known Norton Security applications are basically being stolen from the aforementioned organization.

These scams are in no way comparable to the basic and obvious anti-virus scams that are run on a common basis.

The scammers make the scan look so legit that it never occurs to the victim to question it at all.

There sure is an alert which pops up. The users think of it to be as one from an anti-malware app, when it’s actually coming from a web browser.

The way the scanners go around is that they offer an infection to be paired up by way of a 10-second scan. This obviously lures the users in swiftly.

A web-based dashboard is being implemented by the scammers to manage and monitor all the scams that are happening.

Thousands of dollars have been wrested from the victims that too by using overtly basic, fake looking contrivances.

Last three months of 2018 had been really busy for Symantec, the aforementioned organization, as they’ve blocked PUA installations around 89 million times.

There are several points that have to be kept in mind, for instance, no pop up is capable of analyzing the hard drive and the real files on it.

No anti-malware supplication would ask the user to download a separate application for the update process.

The best way to get saved from this kind of threat is looking out for an alert that mentions the remaining days left in the so called “subscription”.