Phish,
               or Phishing, is a rapidly growing form of fraud that seeks to fool
               web users into divulging private information by mimicking a legitimate
               website. 
            
 
            In a typical scenario, an unsuspecting user gets an urgent sounding
               (and authentic looking) email telling him or her there is a problem
               with their account that they must immediately fix, or the account
               will be closed. The email will include a URL to a website that looks
               exactly like the real thing (it is simple to copy a legitimate email
               and a legitimate website but then change the so-called back-end—where
               the collected data is actually sent. 
            
            The email tells the user to log on to the site and confirm some
               account information. Any data entered at the site is directed to
               a malicious hacker who steals the log on name, password, credit
               card number, social security number, or whatever data s/he requests. 
            
            Phish fraud is fast, cheap, and easy to perpetuate. It is also
               potentially quite lucrative for those criminals who practice it.
               Phish is hard for even computer-savvy users to detect. And it is
               hard for law enforcement to track down. Worse, it is almost impossible
               to prosecute.