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White House is 'close' on Japan, India tariff agreements but expect them to be light on specifics; Families in limbo following federal energy assistance program cuts- we have reports from NH and MD; NV adopted CA's 'clean car' standard, rule now under GOP examination.

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Educators worry about President Trump's education plan, as federal judges block several of his executive orders. Battles over voting rules are moving in numerous courts. And FSU students protest a state bill lowering the age to buy a gun.

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Migration to rural America increased for the fourth year, technological gaps handicap rural hospitals and erode patient care, and doctors are needed to keep the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians healthy and align with spiritual principles.

A text from USPS? It could be a 'smishing' scam

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Tuesday, December 24, 2024   

Many people are still expecting holiday packages this week and the United States Postal Service is warning customers not to fall for "smishing" scams.

John Hyatt, strategic communication specialist for the United States Postal Service, said smishing is the practice of sending fake text messages to smartphones asking users to click on a link to resolve a ZIP code or other issue with a pending package. He warned personal data is what the sender is after.

"Basically criminals trying to obtain personally identifying information about a person, such as accounts, usernames, passwords, dates of birth, credit card numbers, things like that," Hyatt outlined.

In 2020, the Internet Crime Complaint Center reported more than 240,000 victims of smishing, phishing and other fraudulent schemes, costing more than $54 million, with the average person losing about $800.

Smishing texts can be relentless this time of year but Hyatt stressed you should never follow the message prompts.

"When you get a suspicious text message, if you click on those links, it will take you to a website that could be downloading onto your phone," Hyatt explained. "Once you submit that information then they use it for nefarious purposes."

Hyatt emphasized you will only receive text messages from the Postal Service if you have gone online and registered for such services.

"You can sign up to receive text messages about a tracking number," Hyatt added. "Or you can go into the tracking service and put the number in and then ask for text-message updates or even an email update on usps.com."

He noted the Postal Service "Informed Delivery" program is being used by millions of Americans to receive legitimate messages about what packages are on the way.


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