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Fox News, By John Quain

Even Dairy Queen?! Is nothing sacred to cyber hackers?

This week it was revealed that not only had JPMorgan Chase been thoroughly hacked--revealing the names, addresses, phone numbers and e-mails of some 83 million individuals and businesses -- but another nine leading U.S. financial institutions had been attacked, apparently by the same hackers. And now, even Dairy Queen says hackers gained access to its customer credit and debit card information at 395 of its stores.

So essentially we're all prey to digital criminals today. But security experts say we don't all have to be victims.

"Depending on the information taken in the recent breaches, there could be an increase to consumer's risk of e-mail span or phishing attacks," Joe Schumacher, security consultant at Neohapsis, told FoxNews.com. Phishing attacks are usually e-mails from criminals that look like messages from friends or familiar companies that trick the recipient into clicking on a link with malware or a site that steals personal information. For that reason alone, Schumacher and experts say using anti-virus software, much of which is free, is a smart idea because these programs warn about malicious Web sites.

So, even though hackers didn't get account information in the massive Chase attack, they will use the information they gleaned to send out fake e-mails trying to obtain account information.

In addition, "the mere announcement of a breach may lead a different cyber criminal to send malicious warning messages to people," Roel Schouwenberg, principal security researcher at Kaspersky Lab, explained to FoxNews.com. "So be even more suspicious of any message coming from your bank or credit card company." Read more.

Big Guys Get Hacked, So Little Guys Should Watch Out - Fox News

Big Guys Get Hacked, So Little Guys Should Watch Out - Fox News
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