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HMRC acts to alert on scam tax messages
by Susie Hughes at 15:14 25/01/18 (News on Business)
HM Revenue and Customs has stopped thousands of taxpayers from receiving scam text messages, with 90 per cent of the most convincing texts now halted before they reach their phones.
The milestone comes during Take Five To Stop Fraud Week, with the tax authority working to raise awareness of the tell-tale signs of fraud ahead of the Self Assessment deadline.

Fraudsters alleging to be from HMRC send text messages to unsuspecting members of the public. In these messages they will make false claims, such as suggesting they are due a tax rebate. Messages will usually include links to websites which harvest personal information or spread malware. This can in turn lead to identity fraud and the theft of people’s personal savings.

HMRC has reiterated that it will never contact customers who are due a tax refund by text message or by email.

Reports of this type of fraud have quickly increased in volume over the last few years. People are nine times more likely to fall for text message scams than other forms like email because they can appear more legitimate, with many texts displaying ‘HMRC’ as the sender rather than a phone number.

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HMRC, working with public and private partners, began a pilot in April 2017 to combat these messages. The new technology identifies fraud texts with ‘tags’ that suggest it’s from HMRC and stops them from being delivered.

Since the pilot began, HMRC reports that there has been a 90 percent reduction in customer reports around the spoofing of these specific HMRC-related tags on SMS and a five-fold reduction in malicious SMS reports. The initiative has helped reduce reports of these scams from over 5,000 in March 2017, before the new programme was introduced, to less than 1,000 in December 2017.

Progress in this area comes after similar successes in tackling fraudulent emails and websites. In the last 12 months HMRC has initiated the removal of 16,000 malicious websites, meaning even if the texts are delivered the associated phishing website is likely to have been removed. By introducing technical controls, HMRC has also stopped customers receiving over 300 million emails purporting to come from the tax authority.


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Susie Hughes © Shout99 2018


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