How Justin Bieber’s name is used by online perverts

The FBI has released some guidelines to help adolescents prevent sex-related blackmail and extortion via public press websites. This is in reaction to an improved variety of sex-related blackmailers unwanted celebrity news and terrorizing area online.

This follows a variety of busts, such as the nabbing of a 27-year-old man, whom the FBI declare compromised the records of Facebook or myspace customers and forced thousands of females into burning while he viewed via Skype.

 

A common modus operandi, according to the FBI, is as follows:

A criminal, implementing a incorrect identification (such as that of teenybopper celebrity Bieber), connections a lady on a website such as Facebook , benefits her believe in, ingredients romantic information, and then intends to discuss their return “if she doesn’t climb to growing requirements for intimately precise images or videos”.

 

The FBI guidance is as follows:

 

  • Don’t take for provided that your pc’s anti-virus application is a assurance against uses.
  • Convert off your pc when you aren’t using it.
  • Protect your web camera when not in use.
  • Don’t start accessories without individually confirming that they were sent from someone you know.
  • It’s okay to be dubious. If you get a concept with an connection from your mom at 3 a.m., maybe the concept is not really from your mom.
  • If your pc has been affected and you are getting extortion risks, don’t be scared to discuss to your mother and father or to contact police officers.

Now this guidance is audio, but I am not sure it will resonate with a little lady who believes she is the one selected by a modern-day Bob Cassidy to discuss all factors romantic.

I would add the following, perhaps more intense, tips:

  •  Justin Bieber (or any singer/actor) is not going to contact you because he prefers your information.
  •  Most individuals on the web are good individuals, but there are fits out there acting to be something they are not. Some are horrible and simple to identify. Others are experienced and can do serious harm. Keep your senses about you and secure yourself.
  •   Never create factors online that you wouldn’t want to discuss with all your buddies and close relatives.
  •  If you find yourself in an unpleasant scenario like the ones referred to here, don’t hide something bad by doing something more intense. Just quit, take in and tell an mature you really know and believe in.  If you like devices, this anti-peeping web camera is lovely and will help secure your comfort.

This guidance periods in well with Tuesday’s More secure Internet Day, when it was exposed that a huge 86% of 7-11 year-olds and 96% of 11-19 year-olds are interacting online.

Be cautious the Justin Bieber erection Face book scam

That’s perhaps the most improbable caption I’ve still had to write in my computer security vocation, but never mind…

If that’s the case then they might be intrigue by a note that is dispersal virally across the Face book social net claim to be recording of… and how can I put this precisely? I don’t think I can.. Justin Bieber with an erection.

Messages like the following are being seen:

 

WTF !! I just saw that Justin Bieber got erection in a public interview.lol

 

Almost certainly not the kind of message you would characteristically click on from your office computer, but maybe a young teeny bopping music fan in your family would find the subject matter tempting to investigate further.

And if they do click on the link they are taken to a Face book page with the meaning “Justin Bieber gets a boner in Public!!!”, and an invitation to “Click to watch” a video.

The pages contain a graphic claim that the application is a “Face book established app” (which seems unlikely given the subject matter).Would young female fans of Justin Bieber be likely to go further – I suspect so.

 

As is usual in scams like this on Face book, you are then obtainable with a message from Face book ask you to corroborate that you are happy for the third social gathering request to have all sorts of access to your Face book account – counting the ability to post messages to your wall.

 

This is your last possibility to be levelheaded, and not put your account at risk. Unluckily far too many people are trick by social engineering to give doubtful third party apps like this full reign to mess around with their Face book accounts. If they’re not using the modern day equivalent of David Cassidy to lure users into granting permission, they’re pretending to be new Face book functionality like “Dislike” buttons, or pretending to be free tickets with an airline.

 

But if you do make the error of clicking further, then you will find that you are not watching a video of Bieber having trouser trouble, but instead being asked to take a survey. Surveys like this generate revenue for the scammers who are behind the application – they earn charge for every survey that is completed. In the background. Meanwhile, the scoundrel application has ill-treated your social networking account dispersal the spam virally via your wall to your Face book friends and family.

It’s only usual that scams like this will carry on for as long as users continue to fall for silly tricks like this, and the scammers continue to find it monetarily rewarding. If you’ve been hit by a scam like this, remove reference to it from your newsfeed, and revoke the right of rogue applications to access your profile via Account/ Privacy Settings/ Applications and Websites.

I’ve made a YouTube video where I show you how to clean-up your Face book account if you were hit by this or similar scams on Face book:

Don’t not remember – if you know young people who use Face book, you should warn them about scams like this and teach them not to trust every link that is placed in front of them.

Face book comment-jacking? OMG! I can’t believe JUSTIN Bieber did THIS to a girl

It’s preliminary to appear like Face book can’t win next to those who wish to use their overhaul to scam, spam and just cause difficulty. Over the last day or so, a new kind of assault has been dispersal using the phrase “OMG! I can’t believe JUSTIN Bieber did THIS to a girl”.


 

It leads to a page asking you to confirm a simple math problem to “prevent bots from slowing down the site”. In actuality, it is another click jack-type scheme in which you are asked to type the answer into a box. It doesn’t matter what you type, because it’s a social engineering trick. What you are actually typing is a comment that is used to share the link with your friends on Facebook. You can see the tooltip that says “Add a Comment” in the screenshot.

 

This bypasses Face book’s recent attempt at detecting likejacking fraud. Links you comment on are not using the same mechanisms that Facebook is monitoring when you click “Like”. Many moons ago, the first Facebook attacks started with illegitimate applications asking for permission to access your wall and spread their messages by spamming your friends through wall posts. While this worked well, it was a bit easy for Facebook to track down and remove the bogus apps.

 

Early in 2010 we saw the first attempts at like jacking. This technique involves layering one image over the top of a Like button and tricking the victim into clicking something that appears to play a video or a continue button, when in fact they are clicking the Like button hidden underneath. More recently we have seen the attackers trying lots of new techniques. In the past few months we have seen them tagging people in photos they are not in to get you to click, inviting people to fake events and even making you an administrator of a Facebook page that isn’t yours.

 

While protecting yourself may not be as simple as not clicking anything that says “OMG!” that isn’t a bad start. Be skeptical, understand that messages from your friends may not in fact have been sent to you willingly, and if you are really tempted to click, take a short timeout to conduct a Google/Bing search.As of the time of this writing some of the YouTube videos this scam leads to have been removed by YouTube. However, one video that is still working has over 525,000,000 views since February and thousands of comments in the last 24 hours — in other words, since this Facebook scam has been making the rounds.

Justin Bieber Fans beleaguered via Online Scam

“Internet experts” are caution young Justin Bieber fans to be additional attentive after web fraudsters set up a scam tempting the singer’s devotee with the tempt of free gig tickets.

The infant hit-maker is recognized for his physically powerful online following and frequently keeps in touch with his faithful fans using social networking sites Twitter and Face book. However, an original scheme is targeting Bieber’s Face book friends with a link to a bogus free ticket giveaway for the star’s ongoing U.S. tour, with the words, “Wow! Justin Bieber is giving away free tickets now.”

Experts are worried many youngsters will be tricked into clicking on the link, which snare them into an online fraud, and they are urging Bieber fans to take care.A statement from online security firm Sophos reads, “This is a dirty rotten trick on youngsters.”