Li Zhiqun.
According to the "Beijing**" report, recently, Mr. Wang, a passenger, received a stranger on the train**, the caller claimed to be the customer service of an airline, informing him that the flight he booked had a failure and needed to be changed, and he could be compensated for the missed fee. However, Mr. Wang did as requested by the other party and was defrauded of 9,600 yuan.
Let's take a look at how to lead Mr. Wang into the "trap" step by step: when he heard that the flight information told by the other party was accurate, Mr. Wang believed it. Under the guidance of the other party, Mr. Wang provided his bank card account number and verification code. Soon, Mr. Wang found that 1,000 yuan had been deducted from his account. The other party lied that there was a problem with the operation and asked him to log in to the webpage to contact "customer service", and as a result, his other credit card was deducted another 8,600 yuan.
After feeling that something was wrong, Mr. Wang called the airline** and was told that everything was normal for the flight he had booked. At present, Beijing Railway** is investigating the case.
Reviewing this case, if Mr. Wang hung up first and then verified with the airline after receiving the stranger**, he would not have been deceived. After being swept away 1,000 yuan, if Mr. Wang could calm down and call the police, he would not have been swept away for 8,600 yuan for the second time.
This case reminds people that telecom network fraud still exists, and there is a long way to go to fight fraud and prevent fraud.
On the one hand, it is necessary to intensify the crackdown and punishment. It is necessary to compress the space for lawbreakers to commit crimes. Public security organs, financial institutions, and other anti-fraud departments should closely cooperate in light of changes in the situation, study and analyze the lawbreakers' new methods of committing crimes, and adopt corresponding countermeasures. Criminals must be severely punished. Law enforcement and judicial organs should promptly accept cases of wire fraud and handle them strictly in accordance with law.
On the other hand, it is necessary to intensify prevention and publicity. It is necessary to strengthen technical means of prevention, do a good job in network information security protection work, and avoid information leakage as much as possible. It is necessary to issue anti-fraud warnings in a timely manner to remind people to pay attention to prevention. It is necessary to update the methods and methods of publicity. Anti-fraud propaganda should not stop at traditional practices such as sending a few leaflets, hanging a few banners, and sending a few text messages, but should engage in more "immersive" propaganda, so that people can learn the skills of identifying and preventing telecommunications network fraud through new carriers such as movie plots, simulated cases, and online games, and provide different types of anti-fraud "dry goods" to different groups through methods that everyone likes to see.
The author believes that to prevent online wire fraud, it is still the same sentence: "You have a thousand plans, I have an old idea." In the face of all kinds of telecom network fraud, the old idea is to keep in mind the principle of "three nos and one more", that is, do not click on unknown links, do not trust strange calls, do not disclose personal information, and verify transfers and remittances. ⑮