This topic is tangential to Smokeball but it is law practice management / tech related.
The Problem:
I have used contact forms on our website for years to allow visitors to “request a consult”. In the last couple of years we have received an increasing number of scam consult requests. They have in common:
- Phone numbers that do not work;
- Unusual verbiage or stilted phrasing which suggests to me that the writer is speaking english as a second language; and,
- Scope of work related to large machinery/equipment/boat purchase or sale.
Universally, these requests have a premise which sounds too good to be true but require them to quickly make a trust deposit by EFT and they request trust account information immediately. Previously I have screened these by asking for a valid driver’s license and working phone number. A recent scammer actually sent back what appeared to be a picture valid driver’s license but there were a number of characteristics which on close inspection did not seem genuine.
Does Your firm have this problem?
Possible Solutions?
I am contemplating methods to retain the usefulness of the web contact forms while mitigating the risk and waste of time cause by increasingly sophisticated scammers. I am considering using “geoblocking” to block IP traffic from certain countries. However, this does not prevent traffic which uses a VPN Tunnel.
Does your firm have a solution?