NOTICE
The IRS does not send taxpayers unsolicited emails about their tax
accounts, tax situations or personal tax issues. If you receive such an
email, most likely it's a scam.
IRS impersonation schemes flourish during filing season. These
schemes may take place via phone, fax, Internet sites, social networking
sites and particularly email.
Many impersonations are identity theft scams that try to trick
victims into revealing personal and financial information that can be
used to access their financial accounts. Some email scams contain
attachments or links that, when clicked, download malicious code (virus)
that infects your computer or direct you to a bogus form or site posing
as a genuine IRS form or web site.
Some impersonations may be commercial Internet sites that consumers
unknowingly visit, thinking they're accessing the genuine IRS website, www.IRS.gov. However, such sites have no connection to the IRS.
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