Last night my sister called me in a panic. She got a call from a “usbank” claiming that they managed security for her credit union on weekends (first 🚩). They listed off her SSN and other credit information to prove to her they were real. I wasn’t there so I couldn’t tell her that this was another major red flag. She gave them her banks account number. My other family members were there and called her credit union to check. The real bank walked her through what to do.

She didn’t lose any money but came scary close to it. I’ve had her freeze her credit. Put up a alert on her credit. Changed all her passwords (saved in 1password). Set up token based authentication and I’m trying to convince her to use Google voice for sms 2fa.

Should she even bother with dark web monitoring or anything like that?

Edit: phone number used by scammers: 12104170000 I don’t believe this is their actual number. It was likely spoofed. Be cautious before trying to scambait it

  • Evoke3626@lemmy.fmhy.ml
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    1 year ago

    It honestly sounds like you did everything right. I would’ve suggested everything you did. Credit freeze is #1, then passwords is #2. You did great.

    As for your question, I’ve actually used several monitoring services and have had an overall positive experience but it’s definitely a mixed bag and YMMV. Some info I get is very specific and therefore helpful. Sometimes it’s extremely generic ie an alert that your primary email has been found on the dark web…. Ok, I would’ve gotten a similar repose with an “have I been pwned” search. I’ve been involved in like 15 days breaches, I fully expected that email to be found on the DW by now.

    I also got these services all for free. One is permanent via my credit union which is great. I’ve gotten others as consolations from companies that have had breaches with my data.

    I personally think it’s worth it to her even if she has to pay for a year or two and reevaluate from there, given her situation.