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Netflix account freeze – don’t click, it’s a scam!

Another Netflix phishing scam!

We’ve written about these scams before, and we’ll probably write about them again…

…for the sadly simple reason that THEY WORK.

They work because scammers know that the less inventive they are, the more believable their messages become.

It’s also a lot less effort to copy genuine content and adapt it just a little than to try to create your own material from scratch.

That’s what Naked Security Editor-in-Chief, Anna Brading, thought when she received this scam yesterday:

This is a notice to remind you that you have an invoice due on, 27/11/2019. We tried to bill you automatically but you local bank being held a transaction.

Sadly for the crooks, and fortunately for anyone who received this scam, the tiny bit of text that the criminals decided to write by themselves contains several rather jarring errors.

For the most part, however, this email is disarmingly simple, and therefore surprisingly believable, for all that it’s given away by typos, grammatical mistakes and orthographic errors.

It’s not overly dramatic, it’s not threatening, and it’s polite.

It’s the sort of thing that might easily happen from time to time – a recurring credit card transaction that’s temporarily failed – and that in real life is usually pretty easy to sort out.

Indeed, it’s the sort of glitch you’ve probably dealt with once or twice before, and that you may well have resolved entirely online without even leaving your browser.

Of course, even if you missed the spelling mistakes (a genuine retailer or cloud service is unlikely to mis-spell the word invoce, which should be invoice), the link would be a giveaway – this one uses a URL shortening service, but with an HTTP (insecure) URL instead of HTTPS.

Nevertheless, if you clicked without taking a moment to check it, you would end up redirected to a surprisingly believable page that is hosted on a website with a valid HTTPS certificate:

Sure, you’re not on a netflix.com web page, which is an obvious indicator that this is a scam, but the crooks have disguised the actual server they’re on by using a domain name that starts with a 32-character hexadecimal string.

The long, random starting text in the URL shoves the final part of the domain name off to the right far enough that your browser probably won’t have enough space to show it.

The domain used in this attack was only registered on 2019-11-17, and the web certificate was created yesterday, so the site was probably set up specially for this scam, perhaps along with a bunch of others.

Remember that once you have acquired a domain name such as example.com, you’ve also acquired the right to create as many subdomains beneath it as you like.

Of course, if you are in a hurry, and don’t take a few moments to look for the obvious clues, you might easily end up entering your password – by which time it’s already too late, because the form submission button uploads it to the crooks, not to Netflix.

If you still don’t spot the deception (we’re hoping you wouldn’t have got this far!), then the phishing continues, taking you via this page…

…to one that asks directly for your card details:

Ironically, these crooks would probably have been better off skipping the intermediate page that starts, “Dear friend,” because it’s awash with telltale signs of bogosity.

Errors you should spot for yourself include spelling mistakes, poor grammar, and a mixup with languages (there’s a link in the middle of an otherwise all-English page that mysteriously offers to sell you a gift card in French).

What you need to know

Here’s what you need to know about this particular scam:

What to do?

Given that today is Black Friday, which is by all accounts the biggest, boldest and baddest retail day of the year in North America, here are three general tips that we urge you to adopt if you haven’t already:

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