Today, I received a worrying e-mail which, at first sight, seemed plausible. The first part of it read:
"Changes In Your PayPal Account.
Hello,
During Our Daily Security check, we noticed an unrecognized device logged into your PayPal Account.
And Some Changes were made in your Account which includes:
• Changes in Your Billing Address
• Changes in Your Phone Number
• Changes in Your Card Details
For Security Reasons this Changes Has Been Placed on Hold Till the next 48 Hours
Didn't Recognize this Changes?"
However, closer inspection revealed mistakes in the English (e.g. "this changes"), and hovering over the hyperlinks showed that they pointed somewhere other than PayPal. A visit to PayPal by typing the URL into the browser showed everything to be in order.
So, be on your guard, don't get into a flap when you get an e-mail like this, and don't click on any links. If you are less than 100% certain that the message is genuine, always access the website concerned via another route (e.g. Google if you can't remember the URL).
PayPal Scam Warning
Re: PayPal Scam Warning
Check here
https://www.paypal.com/us/webapps/mpp/s ... rt-problem
Forward it to spoof@paypal.com without opening it.
https://www.paypal.com/us/webapps/mpp/s ... rt-problem
Forward it to spoof@paypal.com without opening it.
Bob
Re: PayPal Scam Warning
Thanks for the link. E-mail sent.YYS4BOB wrote:Check here
https://www.paypal.com/us/webapps/mpp/s ... rt-problem
Forward it to spoof@paypal.com without opening it.
Re: PayPal Scam Warning
I had one of these and a HMRC's tax too
I never respond via the links provided but always give direct to the relevant website. Changed my password there just incase
I never respond via the links provided but always give direct to the relevant website. Changed my password there just incase
reg
Re: PayPal Scam Warning
I get these now and again and recently I had a flurry of Amazon phishing emails. It's a scattergun approach, around the world the perpetrators send approx a trillion phishing emails a year and if they hook a tiny percentage then they're in the money. Same advice as before, never click on links in an email and report them to the relevant site. It's also good practice to use different passwords for each website that you login to.
John
There's nothing regular about wheels
There's nothing regular about wheels