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"Scammers stole £40k after EDF gave out my number"It sounds like some of the story is missing. (Not least of which is an
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/ckg885lxd3jo
[An unfortunate choice of photo of the victim, he looks really cheerful about it.]
"A man targeted by fraudsters who got his mobile phone number from an energy company said he often woke up in the night thinking "what next?".
Stephen, from Hertfordshire, had more than £40,000 taken from a savings account after his name and email address was used to get the information from EDF.
Within 48 hours of his mobile phone number being divulged, his accounts with O2, Nationwide Building Society and Virgin Media had all been compromised.
EDF said such incidents were rare but it took them seriously and added: "We are sorry for the difficulties this fraudulent caller has caused Stephen."
...
'£50 to close the case'
After more than a week, EDF finally responded about the call it thought Stephen made at 11:00 GMT on 3 February.
EDF explained the fraudster had his name and email address and had asked EDF to give them his mobile number, which the company did.
"I said, 'Why would you do that?' They said the person had gone through security. 'With a name and email address', I asked?," he said.
"EDF said, 'Yes' - and then offered me a £50 goodwill gesture to close the case."
So, EDF allowed them to go from his email address to obtaining his mobile phone number for a SIM-swap scam, but I wonder how they managed to go from either to all his savings accounts, unless they'd also compromised his PC or phone as well; if the latter, why did they need to go via EDF?
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