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Calling Your FI? You Could Be Calling a Hacker Instead
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Calling Your FI? You Could Be Calling a Hacker Instead

June 16, 2025

When did calling your financial institution (FI) turn into calling a hacker instead? Well, there’s now an improved Android banking trojan named FakeCall that’s intercepting calls to FIs. It sounds hard to believe, but victims of FakeCall malware along with their financial accounts tell the story—and there’s more to know.

FakeCall Tricks

FakeCall reportedly has 13 new variations, with all making detection more difficult. One thing they all have in common is having you believe you’re speaking with your FI representative—after all, you’re the one who called them. Sharing login credentials, credit card numbers or banking details with your FI is part of proving you’re the real account holder. With FakeCall, you’re sharing that PII with an attacker.

What victims learn too late is the call to their FI using the legitimate phone number, was intercepted by an attacker using FakeCall. The malware knows when calls are made to FI’s, and that’s when attackers start stealing your sensitive PII. FakeCall also bypasses your device consent and gives itself other permissions without your knowledge, and that gives attackers total control over your device.

Hang Up on FakeCall

Like a lot of malware, FakeCall hides in bogus apps from third-party app stores. Getting apps from these unofficial stores is called sideloading and it’s very risky because they don’t check apps for malware to the degree that the official stores do. Stick with the legitimate Google Play Store, Apple Store, or whatever is official for your device. They scan for malware before making apps available.

Originally, the only language FakeCall used was Korean, but now it’s supporting English, Chinese, and Japanese. As with many cybercrimes, starting in a limited area before spreading out is common. So, for those of us in the U.S., keep your apps legitimate, because FakeCall could be just around the corner.


Accounts Drained By Zelle Smishing Scam

Mobile Security

Accounts Drained By Zelle Smishing Scam

From time to time, scammers come up with a new tactic using new technology, new events, or whatever they can to continue tricking us into giving up our personal or confidential information. Over the past few years and with the increasing use of texting and SMS messaging, a newer one in the bag of tricks has been coined as “smishing.” Because it’s text, it often catches people off guard and causes them to react quickly, which is exactly what you shouldn’t do. READ FULL STORY

Shimming Right Along To Skim Your Payment Card Number

Education

Shimming Right Along To Skim Your Payment Card Number

By now, most of us have at least one or two EMV (Europay, MasterCard, Visa) cards. These are the payment cards that were touted as far more secure than the ones with the magnetic strips on the backs. And indeed, if you ask Visa these cards have resulted in a 75% decrease in fraud in the three years since they were introduced. Cybercriminals are of course finding ways to take advantage of the EMV cards too. Now, there are reports of a new way to skim. READ FULL STORY

Keeping Your Bank Account And Credit Cyber-Smart

Education

Keeping Your Bank Account And Credit Cyber-Smart

Financial institutions and hacking go hand-in-hand. Hacking banks and their account holders is the most direct cash infusion a hacker can get…and they know it. According to Kaspersky Lab, attacks on ATMs alone hit an all-time high in 2017 with malware-as-a-service (MAAS) opportunities. With this service, even hacking “hacks” who have no cybercrime experience can watch an instructional “how to” video on how to target an ATM successfully. Guarding our finances with common sense protection is something we all need to do. READ FULL STORY

Online Banking Smishing Scam

Mobile Security

Video Icon Online Banking Smishing Scam

Text message scams are on the rise and in this Today Show segment, Jim Stickley demonstrates how easy it is from criminals to perform these attacks. Most people receive legitimate text alerts from their financial institution so a malicious text can be very believable. DON'T CLICK EVER. Simply open your mobile app or open a browser and sign into your account. If there is a real fraud alert, you will be notified once you are logged in. READ FULL STORY

Candy Scammers Use Your Phone And Zelle To Steal Your $$$

Scams & Phishing

Video Icon Candy Scammers Use Your Phone And Zelle To Steal Your $$$

A woman sitting at a New York City café was approached by two kids selling candy for a supposedly worthy cause. That’s when the two candy scammers went to work pulling her into their scheme. The end result for the victim was having all the funds in her banking account stolen; not just $5 for a candy bar. That’s how easily this scam started, and she learned the hard way about smartphone scam security and P2P (peer-to-peer) payment apps like Zelle. READ FULL STORY








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