Five practices Facebook endangering your data.

With over 1.280 million active users (650 of which come daily), Facebook is the world's largest social network users and hosts all kinds experts, digital natives, newcomers to the field, Of course, unaware of everything around the network. Real candid souls, poor them, are exposed to scam anyone who wants to deceive them through internet.

From Facebook whenever you fight harder for scammers disappear from your social network, but it is not always easy, especially when these scammers go through box and pay succulent ads to appear on all possible walls.

Facebook


Here are five of the fraudulent practices more frequently may find on Facebook:


1. "PC Download WhatsApp" We'll say it once: there is no version of Whatsapp computer. Neither official or unofficial. Unless you have some skill and know to use an Android emulator, it is literally impossible for you to WhatsApp chat from your computer.


If you find an ad so suspicious. Chances are that it is a malicious scammer who wants to get off a program that could infect your computer, steal personal information, access your accounts, etc. That is, all but settle WhatsApp.

2. "These two girls look what happened were alone at home." Come, confess. You have also punctured once in one of those apparent videos that are advertised with titles so little suggestive as He asked his girlfriend to have a threesome, look what happened , I was danced with two men and eventually fatal  or this bully learned a valuable lesson . If you click on them, it may take you two things: bad and worse.

Facebook endangering


The bad news is that you redirect to a website that has a mask through which you to give a Like without being aware of it, giving them access, for example, to your wall. The worst is to come into a website that steal passwords, information from your hard drive and even house keys if you're not careful.

3. "Look who you blocking / visit your profile." From Facebook have said it a thousand times: no human way to know who looks at your profile or who has blocked you. Unless you work as a systems analyst in Facebook, it's impossible. If you click on one of these links, you are exposed to you through something similar to WhatsApp on your PC.

4. Websites that steal the password is one of the most repeated advice by the National Police on Twitter: never trust you with web addresses (URLs) shortened whose fate can not foresee before clicking. Facebook goes something like: if a friend sends you a private message such Did you see that picture salts naked?  with a suspicious url, no pinches, because you may be using a mask to access your data.

If you do not know why it's dangerous, you can have a look at this video.

5. "We give these iPhone we can not sell!  One of the most recent and incomprehensibly popular scams. Surely you've ever found in your timeline to an alleged Store which claims 200 iPhone that can not be sold for any minor defect (the box is broken, has spotted the bar code ...) and that will give to all who share its publication.
Stand one second to think: an iPhone does not cost less than 500 euros, do you really think someone will buy? If you see a contact in Facebook sharing something, give congratulations: it is very likely that those who created this publication have already accessed their mail by permission just to give them.
Source : Facebook

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