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companies via the Business EmailCompromise scam, reports in The East African said last week. Through Operation reWired, we are sending a clear message to the criminals who orchestrate these Business EmailCompromise schemes that ‘I will keep coming after you, no matter where you are.’”.
But that message is apparently lost on criminals, who, according to a new report, have stolen some $26 billion over the last three years in a scam generally known as “ business emailcompromise.”. This is not the first time the FBI has sounded a warning about business emailcompromise. billion in 2018.
If the Business EmailCompromise (BEC) scam isn’t on the radar of every corporate finance executive, it certainly should be. The 2018 report, sponsored by JPMorgan , finds fraudsters are spinning their BEC webs even broader, targeting new channels of business transactions.
Unlike traditional [business emailcompromise (BEC)] attacks, which are starting to raise red flags with financial institutions, payroll diversion attacks eliminate the interaction with banks because it is a direct deposit instead of a wiretransfer,” said Crane Hassold, senior director of threat research at the firm.
Paper checks for domestic suppliers, wiretransfers for international ones. That’s the status quo in corporate payments, and it’s not only creating friction for the business payer; it’s creating headaches for small business (SMB) accounting too.
Among the most prevalent is the Business EmailCompromise (BEC), a type of social engineering attack that received significant attention last year. “Wiretransfer fraud is of particular concern for corporate treasury,” the company wrote. The tactic is relatively simple.
The business emailcompromise (BEC) scam is a cybersecurity threat to businesses of all sizes, and the financial and security implications of a successful attack aren’t isolated to its target. Meanwhile, the Better Business Bureau said 80 percent of businesses received at least one kind of BEC scam email in 2018.
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