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Home News

ATO issues email scam warning

Following a spike in fraud activity in recent amounts, the ATO has alerted professionals and their clients to a potential email scam attempting to mimic official ATO correspondence.

by Jotham Lian
January 22, 2018
in News
Reading Time: 2 mins read
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The ATO is warning of an email scam, which features the tax office’s letterhead and an email address similar to those used in official ATO correspondence.

In an example email provided by the ATO, scammers are asking people to complete an online ‘tax form’ through a link that contains malware.

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The tax office has advised on several telltale signs of an email scam including that the email doesn’t have a @ato.gov.au sender email address, even though the sender may look similar. Other signs include that the client is not specifically named and poor grammar.

Professionals are often certain they wouldn’t fall victim to a dodgy email, but similar scams involving fake emails from ASIC almost fooled some SMSF and advice professionals last year.

This latest scam alert follows email scams from March to September 2017, and a phone scam alert in December last year.

Cyber frauds and scams have been in the spotlight recently, with tax professionals being urged to tighten up their processes with the impending Notifiable Data Breaches (NDB) scheme set to kick off next month.

The scheme will commence on 22 February and will require agencies, organisations and certain other entities to provide notice to the Office of the Australian Information Commissioner (OAIC) and affected individuals of a data breach.

The scheme will cover accountants and tax professionals who deal with tax file numbers, as well as entities that have an annual turnover of more than $3 million.

Tags: News

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Comments 1

  1. Ex Castillo says:
    8 years ago

    Scams are out of control. Many have been victims of these deceptive acts. This is why it’s highly recommended that consumers consider protecting their phone lines with a call blocker device. we have helped many people (mostly elderly 60 or older) protect their phone lines using call blockers. Please learn more about call blockers,

    Reply

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