Audio By Carbonatix
World Rugby, the global governing body of the game of Rugby, has issued an urgent cyber fraud alert to all member unions of the game.
In a letter dated February 14 2024 and addressed to secretaries, Chief Executive Officers of unions and regional associations in membership of World Rugby, the chief international relations and participations officer of World Rugby Mr. David Carrigy warned all members to be cognisant of emerging cyber and fraud threats that are increasingly affecting all organisations but particularly rugby unions and to take urgent measures to address these emerging threats.
Below is the full letter from World Rugby:
2402 CL Cyber Fraud Awareness Letter
We would like to raise awareness of cyber and fraud threats that are increasingly facing all organisations.
Fraud and cybercrime is a highly impactful enterprise and an ever-present threat, with fraudsters continually finding new and sophisticated ways to target both individuals and businesses. Unfortunately, our organisations are also exposed to these risks. We have recently witnessed a few instances where the rugby community has been targeted.
This can often take the form of impersonation fraud, whereby email accounts are accessed by fraudsters and fake communications are issued. Fraudsters may intercept invoices to change the recipient bank details or may contact others for requests for money. These fraudulent communications can be very convincing. Fraudsters will often try to copy the language and approach of their victims to appear genuine and can gain a lot of information over time through emails. They may also use techniques to create a sense of urgency to convince individuals to make payments or part with sensitive information.
What can I do about this?
• Check your cyber protection. Do you have strong password protection on email accounts? Have
you enabled multi-factor authentication? Do you know how to report any concerns within your organisation?
• Follow your internal processes. If bank account details have been changed, make contact with
the recipient to verify they are legitimate. Do not trust contact details provided on invoices. If the invoice has been compromised, the fraudster will have likely changed the contact details as well.
• Check email addresses. A very common approach is to slightly amend an email address so that a fake address looks legitimate. For example, @worldrugby.org (valid) vs @worldrugby.com (fake) or @world.rubgy (fake). Fraudsters may also slightly amend the spelling of first or last names to make the address look familiar. If you know the recipient, call them on a trusted phone number to verify information.
• Look for warning signs. Has the language or tone of an email changed? Has an invoice been reissued with changed account details or a different font? Is someone seeking urgent payment or citing an emergency situation? These are all common red flags of impersonation fraud. Remember the recipient may have had their account unlawfully accessed by criminals, so the email address might be genuine. You should take extra care to confidently validate authenticity before making any payments.
Fraud awareness is one of the best ways to help protect yourselves against these threats. Please rest assured that you can feel confident in operating your business as usual. If you have any questions or concerns or would like further information on best practices, World Rugby can offer advice and guidance at infosec@worldrugby.org.
Latest Stories
-
GMet proposes Authority status under new legislative framework
8 minutes -
Kpone Katamanso MCE condemns cattle invasion of school after viral video
11 minutes -
Speaker Bagbin calls for closer Parliament-Judiciary ties as Supreme Court marks 150 years
14 minutes -
World Blood Donor Day: Ghana celebrates humanity behind every drop of blood
17 minutes -
Mahama calls for new Ghana-EU partnership driven by trade, investment and industrialisation
20 minutes -
I’m not the president’s appointee; my allegiance is to MPs and Ghana – Speaker
23 minutes -
Fisheries Minister launches project to transform abandoned pits into fish farms
26 minutes -
Ghana-Canada investment forum to deepen economic cooperation
29 minutes -
Ashanti GNAT calls for calm over Nyinahin Catholic SHS teacher-student incident
33 minutes -
PBC workers call on Mahama to fulfil promise to revamp company
36 minutes -
Gov’t registers 45 LBCs to purchase grains to tackle food glut
40 minutes -
Gov’t has distributed 1.7 million poultry birds under Nkoko Nkitsinkitsi
43 minutes -
Over 7,000 UENR freshers benefit from ‘No Fees Stress’ policy – Registrar
46 minutes -
Oppong Nkrumah calls for bipartisan commitment to tackle youth unemployment
50 minutes -
Korea fines e-commerce giant $400m over data breach affecting millions
56 minutes