The Income Tax Department today cautioned
taxpayers not to share their PIN or password of mails, saying it never
asks for such details.In
a statement, the department said it is to ensure that taxpayers are
aware the department does not seek confidential or financial information
of the taxpayer over email.
“The Income Tax
Department never asks for your PIN numbers, passwords or similar access
information for credit cards, banks or other financial accounts through
e-mail,” it said.
“The Income Tax Department appeals to
taxpayers not to respond to such emails and NOT to share information
relating to their credit card, bank and other financial accounts,” it
added.
The Income Tax Department has been at the
forefront of using technology in implementing its e-governance
initiatives, it said, adding, most of its routine communication to
taxpayers is through email and SMS.
“Therefore, the department is very
sensitive and alert to attempts made by fraudsters to spoof the
Department’s identity to send phishing emails,” it said.
The statement further said all taxpayer
reports of phishing emails are forwarded to incident@cert-in.org.in
which is a government of India agency mandated to fight against such
threats.
Further, the department has implemented
best practices such as SPF (Sender Policy Framework), DKIM (Domain Keys
Identified Mail) and DMARC (Domain-based Message Authentication,
Reporting & Conformance) for its email domains.
Use of these protocols enables the email
receiver domains such as Gmail, Yahoo, Hotmail etc to determine whether
or not a received email is actually from the defined sender such as the
Department and block phishing emails from reaching the taxpayer, it
said.
Listing out dos and don’ts, it has asked
the taxpayers to check for the domain name carefully as fake emails will
have miss-pelt or incorrect sounding variants of websites of the Income
Tax department.
“Do not open such emails in spam or junk
folder and do not reply to such emails. Do not open any attachments.
Attachments may contain malicious code,” it said.
Do not click on any links and even if you
have clicked on links inadvertently in a suspicious e-mail or phishing
website then do not enter confidential information like bank account,
credit card details, it added.
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