English

‘Account in Violation of Terms of Service’ Facebook Phishing Scam

Outline

Warning message purporting to be from the Facebook Ads Team claims that your account has been found in violation of terms of service and will be closed for  safety reasons.




Brief Analysis

The message is not from Facebook and the claim that your account is about to be closed is untrue. The message is a phishing scam designed to steal your Facebook account login credentials as well as your credit card details and other personal information.

Example

WARNING ACCOUNT

Your account has been found in violation of terms of service, it is reported as false and your account will be closed for safety reasons.
Facebook does not allow:

• Pretending to be someone else
• Interfere with another comfort for the user
• Having more than one Facebook
• Share link or video content with pornographic videos

We are sure that the account holder, as many users the false account used to interfere with other people.

If you are really user of this account, confirm your account here : [Link removed]

If you can not return the user to confirm this account, we are forced to close the account permanently, and not re-open for any reason.

Thanks,
The Facebook Ads Team
█║▌│█│║▌║││█║▌█║
Copyright © 2016â„¢

 

Detailed Analysis

This ‘warning’, which  was supposedly sent by the Facebook Ads team via Facebook’s messaging system, claims that your account has been  found in violation of the company’s terms of service and will be closed for safety reasons.

The message lists several reasons why the account may be in violation and states – in rather convoluted English – that if you do  not  confirm as instructed, Facebook will be forced to  permanently close the account and you will not be able to reopen it for any reason. It asks that you click a link to confirm that you are the real account holder and you are not running  a ‘false account used to interfere with other people’.  



However, the message  is not  an official  Facebook notification and the claim  that your account will be closed due to a terms of service violation is untrue. In fact, the message  is just one more in an ongoing series of a title=”Facebook Team Security Phishing Scam – ‘Last Warning – Your Account Will Be Disabled’” href=”http://www.hoax-slayer.com/last-warning-disabled-facebook-phishing.shtml”>Facebook phishing scams  designed to steal your account  login details along with other personal and financial information.

If you are taken in by the false  claims in the message and click the link as instructed, you will be taken to a fraudulent webpage that appears to be part of Facebook and features  the Facebook logo and familiar blue colour scheme. Once on the fake page, you will be asked to log in with your Facebook username and password:

Facebook Phishing Scam Website

After supplying your login details on the  fake site, you will be taken to a second fake webpage that demands that you update your credit card details:

Facebook Phishing Scam Website

Next  you may be redirected to the real Facebook website.

Meanwhile, the criminals responsible for this attack can use the stolen login details to hijack your Facebook account. Once in your account, they can repurpose it to suit their own goals and use the messaging system to send versions of the  above scam message to all of your friends.

They can also use the stolen credit card details to commit fraudulent transactions  in your name.

Be wary of any message from Facebook that claims that your account will be suspended or disabled if you do not click a link to rectify the supposed issue.  Facebook will not send you messages that demand such an action. Usually, Facebook will inform you via a notification  from within your account if there is an account issue that you need to  know about.

It is always safest to login to Facebook via an official app or by entering the address in your browser’s address bar rather than by clicking a link in a message.









Original Source : https://www.hoax-slayer.net/account-in-violation-of-terms-of-service-facebook-phishing-scam/