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[Closed] Online Fraud Advice

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[#8372280]

So.....on Sunday I had a large sum of money taken out of my account as a fraudulent transaction.

Here's what happened in brief:

Login into bank online banking....get asked for security details, provide them, website crashes....when I log back in, notice that my account is lacking a big chunk of the balance. Phone up the bank fraud line, they say that the funds will be refunded within 1 working day, reset all info etc

Fast forward to today.....phone up the bank to see whether or not my new card is in the post, ask to hear my balance and realise that the money isn't in there! After a long hold, I'm told that I was misinformed on Sunday and that the bank are not liable to refund me as in providing my details on a phishing website (even though I logged in through their website) that I authorised the transaction.....although they blocked the second attempt to empty my account!!! They've basically just said that they're trying to recover the funds for me 😯 In essence, it is all of my money to my name that they've got (was to be buying a house shortly) probably shouldn't have left it all in my current account but there we go.

Any tips? I've called action fraud etc and got a crime number....


 
Posted : 07/02/2017 3:08 pm
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the bank are not liable to refund me as in providing my details on a phishing website (even though I logged in through their website) that I authorised the transaction...

But you didn't do that, so they are liable? Seems straight forward to me.

How did you get compromised, then?


 
Posted : 07/02/2017 3:10 pm
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Did you google the bank and click on a result rather than typing in the correct URL?


 
Posted : 07/02/2017 3:12 pm
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Have you scanned your computer for malware? As it sounds like they are saying it was a man in the middle type attack. Which would have to be initiated locally.

Edit: As above, and below. Did you login in via the banks homepage? Need exact details really.


 
Posted : 07/02/2017 3:12 pm
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Login into bank online banking....get asked for security details, provide them, website crashes....when I log back in

I think we need more detail here (if you have it) since it's key to your problem as to how your account got compromised.


 
Posted : 07/02/2017 3:13 pm
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If you PM your login details and passwords etc to me I can probably sort it out for you.*

*not really.


 
Posted : 07/02/2017 3:16 pm
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I think what's happened is that the 'online banking' site that you went to was fake - so when you logged in and it 'crashed', what they had really done was harvested your credentials, then immediately logged into the 'real' online banking site and rinsed your account.

How did you get to the online banking site - click on a link somewhere, typed it into the address bar, saved favourite? Did you notice anything suspicious about the site that crashed - certificate errors / no https:// at the start of the link etc? Can you check your browser history to see what the address you ended up at really was?

There's a couple of ways this could have been done - and unless it was really the real bank website that you went to, the bank isn't liable 🙁

In future I would suggest to them that their online banking security measures aren't good enough (static passwords, no 'pick the third / seventh / last letter from your secret word' type random questions, no having to confirm your identity before setting up a new bank transfer via sms / mobile etc) and that you will be moving your business elsewhere!


 
Posted : 07/02/2017 3:16 pm
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After a long hold, I'm told that I was misinformed on Sunday and that the bank are not liable to refund me as in providing my details on a phishing website (even though I logged in through their website) that I authorised the transaction.....

If all you've said to them is that you logged in and your account has been emptied then that is a massive conclusion to jump too. I'd be back on to them to escalate the issue, or even better get into a branch


 
Posted : 07/02/2017 3:29 pm
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Yeah I went through google to the website.....seems that through their website I got redirected at the login stage....the first result in my web history is the legit coop web address (could this still be a none legit site though?) afterwards at the login in stage, the web address has changed slightly.


 
Posted : 07/02/2017 3:30 pm
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Id check for malaware perhaps. Some kind of redirect within the browser.
Unless you genuinely believe Co Op website was compromised and every one logging in that day was getting redirected to a phishing site.


 
Posted : 07/02/2017 3:32 pm
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Does the bank website not ask you to verify a "new" bank transfer via a 3rd level security ?
The online banking wabsite should only allow you to transfer money to known
payees without strict verification.


 
Posted : 07/02/2017 3:45 pm
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If you PM your login details and passwords etc to me I can probably sort it out for you.*

*not really.

Dude. You have to learn to turn it off sometimes.


 
Posted : 07/02/2017 3:49 pm
 km79
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Does the bank website not ask you to verify a "new" bank transfer via a 3rd level security ?
The online banking wabsite should only allow you to transfer money to known
payees without strict verification.

This. My phone would be pinging and I'd have to enter PIN numbers sent by text for this to happen.


 
Posted : 07/02/2017 3:50 pm
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I'm with Co-Op and for transfers to new accounts you have to use the little card reader machine that creates am 8 digit code you then enter to confirm.


 
Posted : 07/02/2017 3:56 pm
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It was with Co-op

Was asked to use the card reader to update security details on the website....which in actual fact was authorising a payment I guess! Still can't quite believe that the card reader worked with a fake website, and that a 5 figure transaction was allowed to go through.....nothing even remotely that much money is sent normally!!


 
Posted : 07/02/2017 4:02 pm
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Still can't quite believe that the card reader worked with a fake website

the card reader just needs the key points (usually payee account number and amount) but that could be put to you as "enter these security numbers into your card reader" etc

Given it's fairly clear youve been phished, Id be trying to isolate the point at which you were redirected from what you say is the authentic CoOp site.


 
Posted : 07/02/2017 4:04 pm
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we had this a few years ago with S'der who use a OTP code - long story short something seemed fishy and the site crashed and I logged in again they managed to take abt 4K out before I logged off.

S'der refunded the money though and asked us to download Rapport for future use.

Looked like we had some malware on the computer at the time.

All the best and hope you get it resolved


 
Posted : 07/02/2017 4:05 pm
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Dude. You have to learn to turn it off sometimes.

You're right....... Mea Culpa. 😳

Apologies to the OP for an ill judged attempt to introduce a little levity into a serious situation.


 
Posted : 07/02/2017 4:05 pm
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I can see in my browser history the redirected web address....seems to have happened at login. Police have this info now (two frigging days after it happened ffs!)


 
Posted : 07/02/2017 4:06 pm
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This sounds really odd.

On my card reader you put your debit card in, enter the PIN number associated with that card at it generates the 8 digit code. Unless the random 8 digit codes is a ruse to make you think it's more secure!

Hope you get it sorted - not good to hear Co-Op are washing their hands of it so quickly.


 
Posted : 07/02/2017 4:08 pm
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None required Perchy....in-spite of my current less than cool and collected mindset, I took it in the spirit that it was meant.....now off to bed with no pudding you massive cockweasel!


 
Posted : 07/02/2017 4:09 pm
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Horrible situation OP, hope you get it sorted.

What address were you redirected to, out of curisoity. Was it

http://www.co-operativebank.co.uk/onlinebanking to something like
http://www.co- [u][b]o[/b][/u]operativebank.co.uk/onlinebanking?

Or was it the change to https://bank.co-operativebank.co.uk

(I don't bank with co-op, I've just gone on their website and clicked the link to see the change).


 
Posted : 07/02/2017 4:09 pm
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now off to bed with no pudding you massive cockweasel!

🙂


 
Posted : 07/02/2017 4:11 pm
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Seriously, the dude that I spoke to at Co-op this morning about it, had THE most blase attitude you can imagine! FFS.....This is literally all of the capitol I've made in my entire life....and I do not come from a well off background at all!


 
Posted : 07/02/2017 4:11 pm
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went from:

www.co-operativebank.co.uk to

bank.co-operativebank.co.uk


 
Posted : 07/02/2017 4:13 pm
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That second address is the legit link (Assuming my PC isn't infected with the same malware too)


 
Posted : 07/02/2017 4:13 pm
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Yeah I've just realised that too! Mystery remains unsolved then!

.....incidentally, I have the surname, sort code and account number of the bank that my money went to. Not sure of what use it'll prove yet though.


 
Posted : 07/02/2017 4:17 pm
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I can't really help but I would go and sit in a branch until they let you talk to someone who can do something or at least give you a path to get to where you want to be.

I'd be using the assurance given on Sunday as a reason why you didn't escalate it there and then and possibly have more chance of recovering the funds rather than where you are now 48 hours later.

I'd also contact consumer advice orgs outside of the ombudsman.

Banks always seem to be able to recover money when it's their own they've transferred in error.


 
Posted : 07/02/2017 4:17 pm
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Tom not sure if you have seen their no risk policy [url= http://www.co-operativebank.co.uk/htmlfragment/callouts/security/no-risk-policy ]No Risk Policy[/url]

Can't see why they are refusing to make you good again given what looks like you followed their policy


 
Posted : 07/02/2017 4:22 pm
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Had a long phone call to the 'head of the fraud team' (yeah right!) about an hour ago.....he apologised for the information given on Sunday, said that he is looking into it, and will have an answer (to my request that they do indeed refund the money!) within 24 hours. I'll not be holding my breath! Think the next port of call will be to go through the financial ombudsman......then to look into selling organs failing that!


 
Posted : 07/02/2017 4:23 pm
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tuskaloosa, they're saying that I did indeed give my details to someone else, hence they aren't paying up!


 
Posted : 07/02/2017 4:24 pm
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I feel sick reading this – I can't begin to imagine how you must be feeling right now. Fingers crossed they see sense and refund your money.


 
Posted : 07/02/2017 4:29 pm
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BTW, do you have any insurance that might cover you for such a loss? A long shot I know (especially as you were saving to buy a house so may not presently have home insurance that might cover you).


 
Posted : 07/02/2017 4:30 pm
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'Trying to recover the funds for me'

Was it a BACS transfer? Are they attempting to reverse it? Since it's clearly a fraudulent transaction (so much so that they blocked the second attempt), they should be moving heaven and earth to get that reversed for you.

What authentication does the account log-in use - is there any extra authentication or just a static password? Are there any restrictions, perhaps additional verification, on making a payment from a new device or terminal? Again, if the bank are being unhelpful, perhaps the ombudsman would have a view on what security systems should be the default for online banking.


 
Posted : 07/02/2017 4:33 pm
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Also interesting to see that their online banking is going to be down this weekend - are they upgrading their security? Have they had lots of such fraudulent transactions take place recently? That might strengthen your case.


 
Posted : 07/02/2017 4:33 pm
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Not sure what to advise or say.

Though the financial ombudsman or legal action failing any success with the former as I don't think it's as easy for the bank to say 'you gave your details to someone else' if the phishing website was identical to theirs etc


 
Posted : 07/02/2017 4:35 pm
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went from:

http://www.co-operativebank.co.uk to

bank.co-operativebank.co.uk

Those URLs are both legit. With .co.uk domains, the part immediately to the left is the domain name and the part before that is the host, the server name if you like.

So, if you went from www.domainname.co.uk to bank.domainname.co.uk you've just changed to a different server within the same organisation. If you're redirected from bank.domainname.co.uk to bank.otherdomainname.co.uk though, this is potentially a different organisation entirely, so possibly a scammer.

Note that they can be sneaky, co-operative.bank.co.uk looks legit at first glance, but it's not. Renember, it's what's directly next to the .co.uk that's important, anything else is window dressing.

(For the benefit of fellow geeks, this is an oversimplification for clarity).


 
Posted : 07/02/2017 4:38 pm
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Cheers for the advice and well wishes chaps, let's hope that some good comes from this situation.....hard to describe how I feel to be honest! I'm not a money driven person at all, but more money than I've had before or will likely have again getting taken in this way is pretty crap!


 
Posted : 07/02/2017 4:38 pm
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This is really horrible but if the address is correct as you say then even using the card reader they would have to be doing some sort of man in the middle attack and I didn't think that was possible with https

The only thing I can think is that you have something that is fooling your browser into showing a url that is wrong but that isn't so easy

In any case it looks as though it would gave caught almost anyone. Im off to split up my accounts 🙁


 
Posted : 07/02/2017 4:41 pm
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Bloody hell that's awful.

I've been doing some work in customer service with another bank and often see attempted phishing stuff, but it's usually totally obvious - not as sophisticated as this.

If it helps, these things usually get resolved once it's clear that there's nothing fishy going on - but you should be prepared to jump through lots of hoops and try to be patient and understand that the bank needs to make sure you are not scamming them.

I really think devices should be able to verify the identity of banking sites, it shouldn't be too hard to setup a database to check against and flag up if there's a discrepancy in URLs?


 
Posted : 07/02/2017 4:44 pm
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Nasty attack there - misleading you into authorise a new transfer
by asking you to re-authenticate .
My online account requires the authorisation of a new transfer using
strict "authorise" rather than "authenticate" procedures, even so
this could be cleverly spun to lead you with the right story/questions
to do as the web page tells you to do - which is what it has done.


 
Posted : 07/02/2017 4:48 pm
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Going through my browsing history, it's showing up 'send money' and 'confirm transfer' pages, all of these have a legit coop web address....none of those pages showed up on my screen at the time though!


 
Posted : 07/02/2017 4:49 pm
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they would have to be doing some sort of man in the middle attack and I didn't think that was possible with https

The only thing I can think is it's some sort of sophisticated browser hijack which waits for you to clear security and then fires its own data before you can continue. I'm just trying to convince myself whether that's possible or not; I'm guessing it could be if it's just sending text to the browser outside of the secure connection endpoint.

Have you tried Googling the rogue account details, see if anyone else has been caught, might shed light on the cause?

Assuming it is an infection:

https://downloads.malwarebytes.com/file/mb3/

... is your next port of call. Run that and let me know what it finds.


 
Posted : 07/02/2017 4:51 pm
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Given the value of the potential loss it might be worth getting an 'official' expert to go through your pc and produce a report on the sequence of events? Might be worth not changign anything else on your pc for now - removing malware or whatever might make proof more difficult to obtain.

Your router may show details of traffic too. And ISP's have to keep it now but not sure what you need to do to get their info...


 
Posted : 07/02/2017 4:53 pm
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