Lady Gaga establish dead in lodge room? Be careful Face book clickjacking scam

Has Lady Gaga actually be found dead in a hotel room? A scam which has increase rapidly across Facebook would surely like you to think so.

Heres’s an instance of a message that is life form seen spreading virally on Facebook, affectation as a link to a BBC TV News report.

 

 

 

Lady Gaga establish dead in hotel room

 

BREAKING: Lady Gaga Found Dead in Hotel Room

This is the most awful day in US history

 

Wow. I denote, yes, it would be tragic if Lady Gaga were to die, but.. Seriously.. “The most awful day in US history”?Anyway, if you are tricked into clicking on the link you are taken in the end (via a website which sloppily allows an open redirect) to a webpage that pretends to contain a BBC News video report:

 

Watch out, though, if you try to play the video as this is a clickjacking scam which attempt to silently say you “Like” the page when you click with your mouse.

Users who have installed a browser add-on such a No Script for Firefox will see a message caution them of the peril of being click jacked.

If you’ve been hit by a scam like this, remove the messages and likes from your Facebook page – and caution your friends not to click on the offending links. Clearly there’s much more work which wants to be done by Facebook to prevent these sorts of messages spreading so fast.

 

Break Up Of Lady Gaga Computers By Hackers

According to The Telegraph, German prosecutors are reproachful two limited hackers of breaking into the computers of over 50 pop stars, as well as Lady Gaga, Kelly Clarkson, Justin Timberlake and Kesha.

(Wouldn’t you have to be pretty brave to blackmail Lady Gaga? She can be, um, scary. )

Ralf Haferkamp, from the Duisburg prosecutor’s office, thought in an interview with Deutsche Welle that the hackers, two boys of 17 and 23 from the West of Germany, impure the machines with malware in sort to steal all sorts of files.

 

 

A stolen possession supposedly purloined by the duo includes credit cards details, private pictures, emails and unreleased songs. Prosecutors also assert that the suspect managed to sell some of the musical fabric on the internet – where, because it has not been formally released, it can get high prices.So how did the two men get caught? The Telegraph news that the hacker duo bragged about their wicked activities on the web. If culpable of the crime then this would propose that the pair is not only greedy, but foolish show-offs too.

 

Of course, Lady Gaga isn’t the primary pop star to have caught the notice of cybercriminals. In the past we’ve reported on how celebrities such as Lil’ Kim, Kanye West, Miley Cyrus, and Britney Spears have had their computers, email or social networking accounts out of order into by malicious hackers.

 

In case you wanted reminding – celebrities aren’t actually that different from the rest of us. Everyone who has a computer has to take rational steps to guard it against malicious hackers and cybercriminals.

 

Lady Gaga Fell into Twitter Scam

If you observe any posts on Twitter with a link to a “Banned Lady Gaga Video,” anything you do, DO NOT CLICKS ON IT. The Face book Scam Spam trend is dispersal across Twitter claiming the Twitter queen herself Lady Gaga.

The tweets are spreading through a rogue request that thousands of Twitter users have linked with. The tweet promises a link to a “banned” Lady Gaga video, which any true Monster knows does not exist. Once you click on the bit.ly link, you are taken to a fake YouTube page and when you click the play push button a box pops up asking you to funding permission to a third-party app to access your Twitter account. Don’t do it! If you do, the third-party app will have access to your account and be able to send tweets to all of your followers.

Though Lady Gaga fell for the scam she has managed to delete all the unsanctioned tweets. However, Sophos tracked the tweets down. Here’s what was tweeted:

 

TAROT de shakira [LINK] clarividente de @shakira #horoscopo ganar dinero navegando.”

 

“VIDEO PROHIBIDO LADY GAGA @lady gaga [LINK] ganar dinero navegando.”

 

Lady Gaga issued a Twitter caution to whoever is at the back the app, threatening to unleash her Little Monsters on them. But it looks like the damage was already done. Fooling Lady Gaga is a huge coo for the rogue app considering Lady Gaga has 9.6 million followers, making her the most followed Twitter feed in the world at the time of this writing. With that kind of influence, you can only visualize how many victims this app has already claimed.

Vanessa Hudgens meet FBI to thrash out nude snap hack

Exposed photos and videos of Vanessa Hudgens, the star of “High School Musical”, have surfaced on the net, with conjecture common that they have been released by a hacker who broke into the 22-year-old’s Gmail account. So far, so usual for saucy celebrity news.

But what’s dissimilar on this instance is that not only has Vanessa Hudgens report to have met law enforcement officers to discuss the crime, but as many as 50 other celebrity are said to have been under attack by a hacking gang dead set on stealing compromising snaps and information.

Other stars said to have been in the hackers’ sacking line include actress Scarlett Johansson, who is supposed to have had a nude image stolen from her iPhone. Rumors abound that the hacking gangs have been touting the risqué+ photos and videos to websites, but might bigheaded about their online exploit have been their undoing?

It seems too much of a coincidence to me to believe that these latest reports are not associated in some way to the German inquiry that we wrote about late last year, where two hackers were accused of contravention into the accounts of over 50 pop stars, including Lady Gaga, Kelly Clarkson, and Justin Timberlake.

In that case, prosecutors claim that the hacker’s impure computers with malware in arrange to take celebrities’ credit cards details, private pictures, emails and unreleased songs.

Celebrities are only human (well, some of them.. probably not Lady Gaga) and are just as able of lousy computer security as the rest of us. Just because they are in the public eye, however, does not give anybody the right to look through their private infrastructure, take foolishly stored naked pictures from their phones, or break into their computers.

So, here’s what you should do (aside from the usual advice of running up-to-date anti-virus software, installing security patches and taking care about what programs you run on your computer):

1. Make sure that you are using a hard-to-crack, non-dictionary word for your code word and never use the same password for multiple accounts. If you haven’t already done so – make sure you read about the top 50 passwords you should never use.

2. Take care about the “secret questions” that some websites ask you to answer in case you ever forget your password. That’s how people like Sarah Palin were caught out – as it was simple for hackers to guess her answers.

3. Make sure that you have changed the PIN code on your phone’s voicemail. Too many people leave that as the default, opening up opportunities for strangers to listen to what should be private messages.