Stay Alert – Quit Answering Those Online Quizzes
Before you take a quiz to find out which Marvel character you are, ask yourself: Do I know who’s gathering this information about me or what they plan to do with it?
Personality tests, quick surveys, and other types of online quizzes ask seemingly harmless questions, but the more information you share, the more you risk it being misused. Scammers could do a lot of damage with just a few answers that give away your personal information. We’ve heard about scammers phishing for answers to security question data through quizzes. They use your quiz answers to try and reset your accounts, letting them steal your bank and other account information. Some scammers hack social media accounts and send malware links to friends of the hacked account holder under the guise of sharing a quiz.
One major way to protect your personal information — in addition to maintaining strong passwords and using multi-factor authentication — is to steer clear of online quizzes. Or just don’t answer them truthfully.
As for accounts that require actual security questions, treat them like additional passwords and use random answers. Asked to enter your mother’s maiden name? Say it’s something else, like Vanilla or another word you’ll remember. Or use a password manager to store a unique answer. This way, scammers won’t be able to use information they find to steal your identity.
If you suspect that an online quiz is a phishing scam, you can report it to the FTC at ReportFraud.ftc.gov.
Before you take a quiz to find out which Marvel character you are, ask yourself: Do I know who’s gathering this information about me or what they plan to do with it?
Personality tests, quick surveys, and other types of online quizzes ask seemingly harmless questions, but the more information you share, the more you risk it being misused. Scammers could do a lot of damage with just a few answers that give away your personal information. We’ve heard about scammers phishing for answers to security question data through quizzes. They use your quiz answers to try and reset your accounts, letting them steal your bank and other account information. Some scammers hack social media accounts and send malware links to friends of the hacked account holder under the guise of sharing a quiz.
One major way to protect your personal information — in addition to maintaining strong passwords and using multi-factor authentication — is to steer clear of online quizzes. Or just don’t answer them truthfully.
As for accounts that require actual security questions, treat them like additional passwords and use random answers. Asked to enter your mother’s maiden name? Say it’s something else, like Vanilla or another word you’ll remember. Or use a password manager to store a unique answer. This way, scammers won’t be able to use information they find to steal your identity.
If you suspect that an online quiz is a phishing scam, you can report it to the FTC at ReportFraud.ftc.gov.