DARK SHADOWS FORUMS
General Discussions => Testing. 1, 2, 3... => Topic started by: Mysterious Benefactor on December 08, 2005, 12:33:33 AM
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I received several e-mails to visit the site that's mentioned in this article. However, the laugh was on them when it came to me because I don't even have an eBay account, so I immediately knew it was a scam after reading only a few lines of the e-mail. Sadly, for many others, though, that wasn't the case:
As shown by a recent attempt on customers of online auctioneer eBay, phishers can still cause serious headaches despite increasing consumer awareness.
Check out: Phishers Slip Through Web Loopholes (http://www.eweek.com/article2/0,1895,1897025,00.asp?kc=ewnws120705dtx1k0000599)
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It seems like someone is trying to revive this foolishness because I just received another one of the e-mails. ::)
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Thanks for the heads up, lately I've been getting a few false messages a day from ebay and paypal, also from Chase banking, I don't even have an account there!
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got one from Paypal a few weeks ago asking me to update my info...etc..so i forwarded the email to Paypal security..
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I've gotten the fake Paypal one, too, and since I've used Paypal a couple of times I wasn't sure if was real or not, so I too contacted Paypal about it. They said it was fake.
I've gotten the fake e-bay ones for quite some time. Now that I have bought something on ebay for the first time (as mentioned in another thread), I really do have an account with them, so when I got a new message supposedly from ebay, I almost opened it until I remembered that I had set up that account using my other email address.
Right before Christmas I got one supposedly from amazon that said something about a billing problem in the subject line. I use amazon regularly, but hadn't purchased anything for a while, so I went to amazon's site and checked my account there. There were no billing issues.
I never open the ones from Chase since I don't know if they're real or not, since I do have accounts with them.