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#1 |
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Member
Senior Member
Join Date: Feb 11, 2005
Posts: 1,516
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i got an email this morning that was a great job of trying to scam, by useing paypal
it looked official and EVEN USED MY CORRECT NAME--not dear apypal user it said i made a payment for nearly $ 200 for a gold watch everything was perfect as far as looking like paypal at the bottom was a link if you didnt purchase this item, clink the link for a full refund of course they needed you to sign in to your account they must have wanted the passwords i knew right away, since i have a premire businessa ccount, i have the secure linkt hey used to offer, and auto password feature, from years ago so my sign in will not trigger with the proper paypal code but i bet a lot of folks will fall for this one they did a great job so how did they get the correct name and info simple anytime you buy or sell on ebay, ioffer, etc the other partry in the transaction gets all your info and with that your paypal name as well there are scamemrs that buy or sell cheap items to get your info note cards, coupons, recipes, things that sell for pennies, are fronts for info grabbers they are not dummies some very harp and the one this moring was the best i ever saw be very careful if you ever sign in to paypal from a link just go to the paypal.com site and sign in theres no advantage to useing a link from anyone even if its actualy paypal all the info and what ever is on the normal site one common misconception i hear is well i only keep like $ 50 in my paypal account, so im safe WRONG most accounts are linked directly to a credit card or a bank account or several if a scammer has your password they can clean you dry in minutes your entire bank account and all the credit limit you have on all cards and of course they will run them through their bogus bank account and close it down the minute they ahve all your money paypal has no way to recover it then your just flat OUT |
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#2 |
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Sleigh? What sleigh?
Forum Regular
Join Date: Aug 03, 2005
Location: In the "Secret Room" with the cronies!
Posts: 756
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This is not new & is not limited to Paypal. Anytime you get an email from a "financial institution" with a link for you to login by typing in your password, don't do it. Instead, go to the main website (by typing in the URL) of the financial institution and log into your account that way. You'll notice the REAL emails you get from banks, credit card companies, etc, tell you what they want to tell you & then say go to their website & login for more info or to pay your bill or whatever. They do not provide a link directly to a login.
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#3 |
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balibt eisl kuschn
Frequent Poster
Join Date: Apr 24, 2005
Posts: 224
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Both Internet explorer and Firefox have plugins that will
put in faded text right next to the link exactly where the link will go (it's called Phishing for the exact scam). It's one of the biggest scams right now with visa and mastercard to have someone end up typing in they're information and then clean out the account. |
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