We see the following message – verbatim – every few months. It hits WordPress sites seemingly at random, usually through a contact form. The name used varies; one site yesterday received two identical messages from “two” “different” “copyright holders.”
The link purports to offer “evidence” of your copyright infringement. Instead, it contains a trojan that can be used to install ransomware or malware on your system.
In other words, if you get the following message, it is a scam. You have not how to save new zealand number in whatsapp committed copyright infringement.
Hello!
My name is Brittany. [Editor’s note: This is one of many fake names used. The “sender’s” name is not Brittany.]
Your website or a website that your company hosts is violating the copyright-protected images owned by myself.
Check out this doc with the URLs to my images you utilized at [your website] and my earlier publications to get the proof of my copyrights.
Download it right now and check this out for yourself:
[URL redacted; OMG, do not click things like this!]
I believe you have intentionally infringed my legal rights under 17 USC Sec. 101 et seq. and could possibly be liable for statutory damages of up to $120,000 as set-forth in Sec. 504(c)(2) of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (”DMCA”) therein.
This message is official notice. I demand the removal of the infringing materials mentioned above. Please take note as a service provider, the Digital Millennium Copyright Act requires you, to remove and/or terminate access to the infringing content upon receipt of this letter. In case you do not cease the use of the previously mentioned infringing content a cour action will likely be commenced against you.
I have a strong belief that use of the copyrighted materials mentioned above as allegedly infringing is not approved by the copyright owner, its legal agent, or the law.
I declare, under consequence of perjury, that the information in this notification is correct and that I am the legal copyright proprietor or am authorized to act on behalf of the proprietor of an exclusive right that is allegedly infringed.
Identifying Scams Like These
How do we know this is a phishing scam?
First of all, the “claim” of copyright infringement is incredibly vague. We’ve seen copyrighted images unintentionally used in the past, and notices come from attorneys, or are super specific. “Hey, on this page you used this image.”
Second, this is a dubious use of DMCA – scary-sounding “legal” language. See the part about $120,000 in damages as “set-forth” (not a word) in Sec. 504(c)(2)? That’s actually $150,000. Do your homework, scammers. (It seems that this amount varies in various versions of the scheme, FWIW.)
Note, too, the last paragraph. This fake person is either the copyright “proprietor” or someone authorized to work on their behalf. Always sad to see a scammer with an identity crisis.
Finally, there’s the fact that this links to a consumer-grade file storage server. Never, ever, ever – ever – click a link like this in an unsolicited message. Just assume it’s a scam.
The ‘Copyright Infringement
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