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100 million dollar fraud by fooling Google and Facebook!

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Many people receive fake messages in the name of winning various lotteries through email, SMS and mobile. Some even deceive people into pretending to be the ‘king of the jinn’ and saying, “Hey boy, you’ve got so much money, now send me so many thousands of rupees to get it.” We all know such incidents. Simple people have lost a lot of money without realizing it. But, would you be surprised to hear of big companies like Google and Facebook being swindled out of large sums of money? No matter how surprised you are, this is exactly what happened!

Published by Fortune Magazine and the U.S. Department of Justice According to the informationIvaladas Rimasskas, 48, of Lithuania, a European country, swindled Internet giants Facebook and Google and stole about মিল 100 million from both companies. He has been evading these two most secure companies in the world for two years since 2013.

The question may be, how did this guy do this impossible thing? A: Using a little email phishing tricks.

According to the leaked information, Remusaskas, an Asian “computer hardware maker”, sent emails in the name of doing business with Google and Facebook. The man said he was supplying computer goods to Google and Facebook, and sent emails asking for payment for the cost of those devices. Rimasskas created a fake email account pretending to be a representative of an Asian hardware company. He used those accounts to send invoices to Facebook and Google for money. Google and Facebook used to send him that money.

Such exchanges may have caused some confusion in the banks, but Rimasskas created a variety of forged contracts and letters signed by alleged executives and agents of Google and Facebook. All those letters had the exact Facebook-Google logo.

By making dollar payments, Rimasskas would transfer all the money from his first bank account to his own bank accounts in Latvia, Cyprus, Slovakia, Lithuania, Hungary, and Hong Kong.

Eventually, Facebook and Google realized the deception, and the US intelligence agency, with the help of the FBI, was able to identify Rimasskas. The two companies claim they have recovered most of the money. However, the amount of rescue was not known.

Rimasskas is currently facing charges of money laundering, identity forgery and forgery. However, he denied the allegations. If the allegations against him are proven true, and if he is given the maximum punishment, then he is 60 years old More (At least 2 years) imprisonment.

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