Have you received an SMS that appears to be from NAV stating that you have received a new message from NAV? This may be a scam. – This is what NAV informs on its website.
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Not sure if NAV is the sender?
- You are not sure whether the SMS or e-mail you received really comes from NAV? Don't click any link. go to nav.no and log in there. Then you can be safe. The best protection against fraud is to never provide personal information unless you are logged into the site nav.no.
- Have you already provided information about account numbers, security codes, credit card numbers or passports/driving licenses? Block cards and bank accounts as quickly as possible.
- Have you received suspicious text messages or emails that appear to be sent from NAV? Belongs report to NAV.
More hints. Fraud attempts via SMS
- Take a close look at the text messages and emails you receive. Make a critical assessment, check the sender and consider whether it may be legitimate. Healthy skepticism is never bad.
- Compare the email address with your previous real emails. Pay particular attention to false sender addresses, bad language and spelling errors. Criminals are getting better at creating fake emails and text messages.
- Be especially careful if you are asked for sensitive information such as account numbers or security codes in a text or email message.
- Don't open attachments from strangers and don't click links uncritically. Enter web addresses yourself in the browser.
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Source: NAV
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