Ramblings of an old Doc
Published on February 11, 2016 By DrJBHL In Personal Computing

 

Before you pass out,

“The IRS has revealed that cyber attackers managed to trick its system in handing over more than 100,000 access codes for user accounts. Fortunately the breach was discovered before any sensitive data was compromised.” – infopackets

The attack occurred at a source outside the IRS. Social Security numbers were stolen, and the hackers set a bot working, using them, and E-PINs were generated from those stolen numbers…to wait for later filing of taxes.

Apparently, 464,000 Social Security numbers were stolen, and “According to the IRS, the attackers made attempts to get a PIN code on 464,000 different accounts and successfully received the code for 101,000 of these accounts.” (ibid)

The IRS has stated unequivocally that no personal taxpayer data was compromised or disclosed.

The IRS will be contacting those affected by actual mail. Make sure you aren’t scammed this way, by phony emails (multi pronged attack).

Source:

https://www.infopackets.com/news/9782/irs-online-security-breach-affects-100k-taxpayers


Comments
on Feb 11, 2016

Thanks for the heads-up.


Make sure you aren’t scammed this way, by phony emails

Also be aware of telephone scams which already exist and this will surely fuel them.  The IRS is not going to telephone a person and demand immediate payment (as in "right this minute or else").  If you feel the need to check up on it, call the IRS via a published telephone number.

on Feb 11, 2016

Indeed, Dave. I'd seriously hold off filing until they announce which outside agency was involved.