America Online Inc. (AOL) has filed three civil lawsuits against major phishing “gangs,” seeking US$18 million from the groups, the company said Tuesday.
AOL, using a Virginia antiphishing law adopted in July 2005, filed the lawsuits against several phishing groups in U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia, in Alexandria. The lawsuits also cite federal law focusing on trademark and antispam rules.
The company accuses several phishing organizations of sending AOL and CompuServe members e-mail messages attempting to trick and lure them to fake Web sites intended to look like the sites of legitimate companies. The phishing scams try to fool the Web users into giving up their personal information, such as AOL screen names, passwords and credit card information.
The scams targeted customers’ personal information linked to several companies, including AOL, the company said.
AOL has collected tens of thousands of examples of e-mail messages transmitted by what the company called phishing “gangs,” it said. The company did not identify the “gangs” or give their locations. A telephone message seeking further information from an AOL representative was not immediately returned.
Phishing scams are a serious problem, AOL said. The U.S. Internal Revenue Service is warning of widespread phishing e-mail scans as tax filing deadlines near. The Anti-Phishing Working Group found nearly 50,000 phishing Web sites created last year; more than 7,000 in December alone, the company noted.