By Davey Winder
I know better than most that Amazon Prime subscribers are under attack: I have been on the sharp end of multiple phone calls and email-based threats in the last four weeks alone. I have the advantage of being a cybersecurity insider, and so you would expect me to be aware of such threats and deal with them accordingly. Not everyone is so well informed, however, which is why Amazon has warned all 220 million Prime customers as attackers strike. Here’s what you need to know and do.
Amazon Warns Hundreds Of Millions Of Customers As Attackers Strike
Pieter Arntz, a malware intelligence researcher at Malwarebytes, issued a timely reminder on July 16 that “scammers are impersonating Amazon in a Prime membership scam.” I say timely, quite besides regular reminders of such attack threats being most welcome, because I have experienced not one, but two of these this week. Both were telephone calls, which I only answered as I was expecting to hear from the hospital and was in bed, ill at the time. The cause of Arntz’s reminder, and the underlying Amazon warning to all 220 million Prime customers, however, was a spike in email attacks claiming that subscription rates are about to rise, along with a cancel subscription button that would lead to Prime account credential theft. The phone calls I took, by the way, were similar in outcome but differed in that they wanted me to believe someone had purchased an iPhone 13, of all things, using my account.
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