- Joined
- 30 Jul 2006
- Posts
- 12,130
About a year ago I built a Windows 10 system for someone.
Today she called me to say that she had received an emailed demand for $5,000 in bitcoins from someone who had guessed her (incredibly stupid) Gmail password. He said that he had a pornographic video of her and would send it to all of her contacts if she didn't pay up. There is no camera on her PC and she has never taken (or emailed) any pornographic videos.
She wanted to know what to do next. I told her not to reply to the email, to change ALL her passwords to something a wee bit harder to guess than h31105tu and to change all her credit cards.
She uses (paid for) Kaspersky but I don't know anything about how one identifies the presence of a keylogger - how would one go about this?
Today she called me to say that she had received an emailed demand for $5,000 in bitcoins from someone who had guessed her (incredibly stupid) Gmail password. He said that he had a pornographic video of her and would send it to all of her contacts if she didn't pay up. There is no camera on her PC and she has never taken (or emailed) any pornographic videos.
She wanted to know what to do next. I told her not to reply to the email, to change ALL her passwords to something a wee bit harder to guess than h31105tu and to change all her credit cards.
She uses (paid for) Kaspersky but I don't know anything about how one identifies the presence of a keylogger - how would one go about this?