Phishing | Accord Mortgages
Phishing & other scams
A fraudster sends out a fake email that has been designed to look like a legitimate one from a financial organisation. The email directs or encourages people to visit a website to revalidate or reactivate access to their online accounts.
The website is fake. It has been designed to look like the target organisation's real website so may look very realistic. The website will contain a form for people to enter their passwords and other personal information. Once some passwords have been collected, they will be used to try to commit fraud. For more information look at our Email Fraud FAQs.
If you receive a Phishing email, DO NOT REPLY and DO NOT FOLLOW any of the instructions in it, even if the tone of the email suggests that action is required urgently.
We will NEVER ask for the whole of your password (except when you want to change it), we will only ask for three characters from it.
We will NEVER send you an email with a link that directs you to any kind of login page.
Always check the URL (address) of the web page you are viewing. All Accord Mortgages web pages addresses start with one of the following:
http://www.accordmortgages.com/
https://online.accordmortgages.com/
When you want to log on to our website, its best to type the whole address yourself, or click on a link saved as a Favourite or Bookmark. This will help you to make sure that you really are visiting www.accordmortgages.com and not a fake website.
Always check the security of the site before you log on by looking for the padlock. If you receive a suspicious email, please forward it to us at phishing@emis.ybs.co.uk. This is a service provided by a specialist third party company; your report will be investigated and action will be taken to close down any fake websites to protect you and other customers who may have been targeted. Please note that you will not receive a response to your email.
In recent years fraudsters have targeted a number of major UK banks and other organisations in an attempt to trick customers into revealing their usernames and passwords for Internet banking services.
Frauds of this type, sometimes called 'phishing', involve fraudsters sending fake emails to an organisation's customers. These emails are carefully crafted to make them look as real as possible, as if the organisation themselves have sent it, not the fraudster.
This is a problem that has affected organisations around the world.
You haven't been singled out. The fraudsters obtain a large number of email addresses through various means - sometimes even guessing them - and blanket email all these addresses. As so many are sent out, they will probably reach many people who have online accounts with the financial organisation they are targeting by chance.
Accord Mortgages does not share email addresses with anyone outside the Yorkshire Building Society Group.
The approach is similar in all cases:
An individual receives an email, apparently from their bank or building society, suggesting that the access to their online account may have been compromised, and requesting that they click on the link provided to confirm the details.
When the link is clicked, they are taken to a web page which looks very much like the genuine bank or building society website.
On the website they are asked to complete a form with their name, address, date of birth, account number, login details (PIN, password, memorable word, etc) credit card and/or debit card information and click a 'submit' button to send this information. Having obtained this information the fraudsters quickly use it to access the account and transfer money from it.
Contact us immediately by phoning 0345 1200 872. We can then change your login details to keep your account secure.
If you have passed on information about other accounts, credit cards, etc, contact the providers of those facilities immediately as well.
Note: Accord Mortgages will never ask you for confidential information in an email. In addition, our staff will never ask you to reveal your password or memorable word. If you receive an email asking you for confidential information that appears to come from Accord Mortgages, please contact us on the above number immediately.
We are confident that our systems are secure but if users give their login information to someone else there is always a risk of financial loss.
Once we know of a problem we will:
Change login information
Check the affected accounts and, if necessary, freeze them to prevent loss.
Contact the police and other related authorities in an attempt to find the fraudsters and shut down their operations.
Visit our security area for details about how you can keep your data secure.
Once the fraudsters are confident that they've gained the victim's trust, sympathy and desire for them, they will tell them about an emotive problem they are experiencing and ask the victim for money to help. For example: They're arranging to visit the victim but need money to pay for travel costs, visa costs etc. Or they've paid for a plane ticket which is then stolen. A family member or someone else they are responsible for is ill and they need money for medical treatment. Once the victim sends them money, the fraudster will keep coming back with more reasons to send them money.
Before scanning a QR code in an email or letter make sure you trust the organisation that’s sent it to you and you have an idea where the code is taking you to. If in any doubt, don’t enter any personal information. If a QR code on a poster, advert or leaflet looks to have been tampered with, or stuck on over the top of an original one, do not scan it.
If you have visited a website you think is suspicious, you can report it to the National Cyber Security Centre.
Please contact us immediately if you are concerned that:
You may have disclosed any confidential information to an unknown third party. You believe a transaction on your account is fraudulent. You are a victim of identity theft. You have any concerns about security.
For more information on current fraud scams, please visit the following websites
- actionfraud.police.uk - a service run by the National Fraud Authority - the Government agency that helps to coordinate the fight against fraud in the UK
- met.police.uk - the Metropolitan Police website
- fca.org.uk/consumers/scams - regulators of all providers of financial services in the UK.
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