Gallo, E. (2011). The Young Adult: Financial Education, Social Networking, and Internet Security. Journal of Financial Planning,24(10), 36-37. Retrieved from EBSCO Discovery Service
Types of personal information that should raise suspicion if requested in email correspondence (using paraphrase).
Email scams are common (Gallo, 2011, p. 36). One of the ways a person can prevent being suckered into a scam is by checking the full sender information, as a malicious sender can masquerade as someone trusted, like a bank or iTunes. One should also be wary whenever any personal data is being requested, and one should avoid clicking through on a hyperlink embedded in an email. Obviously requests for money and for long-in information should raise red flags (Gallo, 2011, p. 37). A real bank is not going to ask for any sensitive personal data, or request a user to log in using a direct link. Asking for social security number, bank account, or passwords in the text of the email is a sign of a scam.
3. Type of computers to avoid using when accessing or entering personal information:
Gallo (2011) recommends that young people "never to use public computers to access sensitive information...
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