Tax scam emails are alive and well as US tax season starts – Naked Security | #daitngscams | #lovescams


Many countries have taxation forms with names that have entered the general vocabulary, notably the abbreviations of documents that employers are obliged to provide to their staff to show how much money they were paid – and, most importantly, how much tax was already witheld and paid in on the employee’s behalf.

In the UK, for example, the form name P45 is often used as a synonym for getting fired, given that it’s a final tax summary that you get when you leave a job, willingly or otherwise.

In South Africa, you get an IRP5 at the end of the tax year – an archaic term that we are guessing is short for Inland Revenue/Personal, Form #5, even though the South African tax office hasn’t been called the Inland Revenue for nearly 25 years.

In the USA, the earnings form is a W-2, short for Wages and Tax Statement, Version 2. (It seems that there used to be a form W-1, but it was superseded back in the 1950s.)

Here at Naked Security, we know the names of these forms, amongst numerous others, because they often show up in tax scam emails, presumably to give those messages an air of realism.

Anyway, given that it’s the last week in January, and thus that US tax filing season is about to get underway, we weren’t surprised to receive a tax-related scam email today, and to see the W-2 form mentioned explicitly.

We were, however, intrigued by the “less is more” nature of today’s phishing message: there was no traditional call to action, just a simple request for further information.