Tag: Singaporeans

  • Singtel Subscribers Hit By Phishing E-mail. Beware!

    Singtel Subscribers Hit By Phishing E-mail. Beware!

    Some Singtel subscribers have received phishing e-mails, seemingly sent by the telco, telling them “Your Singtel bill is now available for download”.

    The bills are all in the $200 range. Some e-mails were sent from a Singtel e-mail address and others from SingNet.

    Singtel subscriber Steven Low, 39, received the first e-mail last Friday. His bill was given as $234.19 and there was an attachment that he did not open.

    The civil servant, who called The New Paper’s hotline, said: “The bill was significantly higher than usual, but because I went overseas this month, I thought it contributed to the amount.”

    Mr Low, who pays his Singtel bills by Giro, received another five similar e-mails.

    “More warning bells rang when I realised the amount in each e-mail was different. I was worried and called Singtel’s customer service. Some customers may not check and just pay.”

    Another Singtel subscriber, Mr Jasper Loh, 38, a helpdesk engineer, also received similar phishing e-mails.

    He said: “I clicked on the link, which opened a blank page and downloaded a file. Luckily, my company’s website security blocked the download. I’m guessing the file will install a virus.”

    “Singtel should do something to stop these phishing e-mails,” he added.

    When contacted, a Singtel spokesman said it was aware of the issue.

    She said: “These are phishing e-mails and are not from Singtel. We advise recipients of these e-mails to delete them immediately.

    “Once informed of such malicious e-mails, we took prompt action to take down the malicious sites linked to these e-mails and to block them.”

    Mr David Maciejak, head of cybersecurity firm Fortinet’s FortiGuard Lion R&D team for Asia Pacific, told TNP it is dangerous to click on the links.

    “The links lead to domains which have been flagged as malicious by our FortiGuard Labs malware detection engines,” he said.

    “A malware file will be downloaded onto the user’s computer… and facilitate the downloading of more malicious files.”

    Mr Maciejak added that anything can be downloaded, including ransomware that will lock up the user’s computer, or malware that may be able to access and steal personal details.

    Mr Tony Jarvis, Check Point Software Technologies’ chief strategist for threat prevention in Asia Pacific, Middle East and Africa, said the links pointed to free online servers with short lifespans that will automatically download files to the end user machine.

    Mr Jarvis said the Singtel e-mail address could be forged by e-mail spoofing.

    He said: “It’s the creation of e-mail messages with a forged sender address. It can be easily achieved by using the right tools and can be done at no cost.”

    He reminds users to read the entire e-mail, especially if they are worried about its validity.

    “They should contact their service provider if they have any doubts. If the e-mail is about their billing, users can think back if the e-mail is sent in their usual billing cycle,” he said.

     

    Source: TNP

  • Trio Bids To Be First Singapore Team To Scale Everest Since 2009

    Trio Bids To Be First Singapore Team To Scale Everest Since 2009

    Three Singaporeans are set to embark on one of the world’s most perilous expeditions in a bid to become the first Singapore team to scale Mount Everest since 2009.

    Dr Arjunan Saravana Pillai, Ms Nur Yusrina Ya’akob and Mr Jeremy Tong will depart Singapore for the Himalayas on Sunday (March 26) and will have up to early June to reach Everest’s summit.

    The trio, whose expedition is being supported by Nanyang Technologyical University (NTU) and the National Institute of Education (NIE), have so far raised more than S$150,000 for their journey.

    For Ms Yusrina, 30, the coming trip will assuage the disappointment of a failed attempt to climb Everest back in 2015, which was meant to commemorate Singapore’s Golden Jubilee.

    The trainee teacher, who is pursuing a Postgraduate Diploma in Physical Education at NIE, was the co-leader of the Aluminaid Team Singapura Everest 2015 team who had to abandon their climb halfway after a powerful earthquake struck Nepal that year.

    “Having made it more than halfway up the mountain two years ago, I was disappointed that the team had to abort the climb. But had we departed just one day earlier, we would have been in a much more dangerous situation higher up the mountains,” she said.

    Her team members of the team are also experienced mountain climbers.

    Dr Saravana, 47, a teaching fellow from NIE has more than a decade of climbing experience, have climbed several peaks, including the 6,400m Mount Kang Yatze II in India.

    Mr Tong, 26, a graduate of NTU’s Sports Science and Management programme, became the first Singaporean to summit two Central Asian peaks above 7,000m last year — Lenin Peak in Kyrgyzstan (7,134m) and Peak Korzhenevskaya in Tajikistan (7,105m).

    However, the team, who hopes their mission will help promote a resilient and can-do spirit among Singaporeans, acknowledged the huge challenge Everest will present.

    “Beautiful as she is, Everest is also extremely unpredictable and volatile, which leaves climbers with a sense of humility and respect for the mountain,” said Dr Saravana.

    The trio consulted other Singaporeans who climbed Everest in the past, including Mr David Lim, who led the first Singaporean expedition that summited Everest in May 1998, and the Singapore Women’s Everest team — who were the last Singapore team to successfully scale Everest back in 2009.

    “We also trained for the past year, including two to three hour runs up Bukit Timah Hill and high-rise public housing blocks. We also do our own strength and fitness regimens, and rock climbing to improve our technical skills,” said Mr Tong.

    Ms Yusrina, added that her past experience on Everest will help the team plan better. “It’s not so much the mountain that you conquer, but yourself,” she said.

     

     

    Source: Today

  • Neighbour From Hell In Yishun Terrorises Upstairs Neighbours

    Neighbour From Hell In Yishun Terrorises Upstairs Neighbours

    Shin Min Daily News shared a video clip of a neighbour from hell who terrorised 2 of her neighbours at Block 112 of Yishun Ring Road. According to the news site, the incident started 2 years ago, when one of the neighbours found a mixture of oil and salt on her metal gates causing it to rust. The other neighbour found a pile of rubbish on her bicycle along the corridor soon after.

    This led them to install a CCTV and they found out that the acts of mischief were caused by a woman who lived one floor below them. The video clip shared by Shin Min showed the woman in sunglasses throwing toilet paper, sanitary pads, braised meat sauce, and even urine at her neighbours’ flats.

    The 2 affected residents set up a barrier using tables and chairs to deter the neighbour from hell who lived below them, but even that did not help. The acts have continued despite calls to the police as well as notices against such behaviour by the town council.

    Shin Min said that the woman in shades refused to answer her door when they tried to talk to her.

     

    Source: www.theindependent.sg

  • Man Behaved Erratically, Yelled At Driver, Resisted Arrest By TransCom Officers

    Man Behaved Erratically, Yelled At Driver, Resisted Arrest By TransCom Officers

    Stomper Vincent was on his way to work yesterday morning (Mar 21) when he heard a man shouting at a bus driver at Serangoon Bus Interchange.

    The Stomper said that he witnessed the commotion at around 9am.

    The man, whom the Stomper said was behaving erratically, was yelling at a bus driver on board an empty bus.

    The Stomper said that the driver had closed the doors of the bus, leaving him alone with the man still inside.

    He also said that he could hear the commotion despite being a distance away.

    Vincent added that officers from the Public Transport Security Command (TransCom) arrived soon after, and pinned the man down because he was resisting.

    According to the Stomper, they later took him away for questioning.

     

    Source: www.stomp.com.sg

  • One Year On, Mother Of MRT Accident Victim Says The Family Does Not Blame Anyone

    One Year On, Mother Of MRT Accident Victim Says The Family Does Not Blame Anyone

    Madam Norizan Ismail still remembers the exact question from her husband that sparked her fears that their son Nasrulhudin Najumudin may have been involved in a train accident near the Pasir Ris MRT station.

    “Did Nasrul contact you?” her husband Najumudin Mohd Sahabudin, a technical officer who works in SMRT, asked on the phone.

    He was then managing the crowd after train services were suspended following the accident on March 22 last year, and rang home after hearing that the victims were from their son’s department.

    When Madam Norizan, 55, later received confirmation that her 26-year-old son was one of the two fatalities, she broke down: “I was speechless. I felt my entire body shaking… I just cried.”

    To this day, she gets emotional thinking about her son, who died along with Mr Muhammad Asyraf Ahmad Buhari, 24, in the accident.

    Not long after she got home that day, SMRT’s chief executive and her son’s manager arrived to explain what had happened, she said.

    “They supported us,” she added simply of the company.

    She said SMRT provided her family and Mr Asyraf’s family with cars for them to visit the graves in the weeks following the accident. The pair were buried side by side.

    Both families held prayers last week to mark the anniversary of the two victims’ deaths.

    Madam Norizan said the most emotional period for her close-knit family in the past year was having to spend their first Hari Raya without Mr Nasrulhudin.

    “Before that incident, once or twice a year, we would have a family holiday,” she said, reminiscing about their last trip to Malaysia, in January last year. “We always made an effort to spend time together.”

    Despite the pain, Madam Norizan, who revealed that she prays for her third son every day, appeared forgiving towards the SMRT.

    The rail operator was fined $400,000 last month for failing to take the necessary measures to ensure the safety and health of employees who had to access the train tracks during traffic hours.

    “When we read about it (the fine), we felt bad,” said the customer service supervisor.

    “As far as our family is concerned, nobody wanted this to happen. We are not blaming anyone.

    “Even the supervisor… He has suffered enough because of this incident. It must have been traumatic for him.”

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

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