Scammers are a major problem for New Zealanders. With ever-elaborate methods of targeting your savings, what can you do to keep yourself safe? Video / Ella Wilks, words / NZ Banking Association
Scammers posing as NZ Post staff have sparked a new warning about fake parcel delivery texts sent from email addresses.
NZ Post said it was aware of the text message campaign.
“Your package has arrived at the warehouse and has been suspended for delivery due to a missing home number in the package,” one such text reads.
Cybersecurity agency Cert NZ’s latest quarterly report said NZ Post was the country’s most impersonated brand in late 2023.
The agency’s phishing disruption service received 1086 reports of websites impersonating NZ Post in the fourth quarter of the year.
Scammers on phishing expeditions sometimes trawl through public databases to find contact details.
Phishing broadly refers to scammers contacting many people, hoping some will click on links or take the bait, allowing con artists to harvest more information about the target, or gain access to bank accounts or credit card numbers.