By
Elinor Mills
Thursday, October 04 2007 01:13 PM
URL:
http://www.zdnetasia.com/news/security/0,39044215,62032971,00.htm
If you use Yahoo Mail you should be seeing a significant reduction in the number of e-mail scams purporting to be from eBay and PayPal very soon.
Yahoo will be upgrading its system beginning on Thursday with technology--dubbed "DomainKeys"--designed to block phishing spam and other fraudulent e-mail messages that look like they come from eBay and PayPal but don't. The system works by verifying the domain of the sender of the e-mail, allowing ISPs to block messages they deem illegitimate.
The upgrade is expected to be accomplished globally over the next several weeks.
Typically, the phishing scams masquerade as e-mail messages from trusted financial sources and direct a recipient to a Web site where they are asked to enter their user name and password. From there, their information is stolen.
Although most companies warn their customers that they won't send unsolicited e-mail messages asking for usernames and passwords, many people are still fooled. Blocking the scam e-mail before they hit in-boxes should cut down on the problem. Now, when is Yahoo going to do this for the major banks?
This article was originally a blog post on News.com.