02-24-2016
02:00 PM
- last edited on
04-24-2018
08:51 AM
by
kh-stanley1
I just received two seperate emails that said........
|
(link removed)
Of course it is a phising email. DO NOT click the "cancel the order" button becasue it brings you to a fake Paypal sign in page........ Trying to scam paypal emails and passwords...
12-13-2017 12:04 PM
What shall I do if pressed link?
12-13-2017 12:23 PM
@katrichardson2010 wrote:What shall I do if pressed link?
A good first step would probably be going to PayPal and changing your password. The purpose of these phishing scams is to get your password.
12-13-2017
01:24 PM
- last edited on
04-24-2018
08:52 AM
by
kh-stanley1
I've received this email and I don't know what to do around it. Could you help me
Thanks
Joanne
12-13-2017 01:36 PM
Delete the email, then empty your trash. Run full anti-virus software and malware on your computer, then get a second version of high quality anti-virus/malware and run it also. Change all your passwords to everything after running the a-v &m programs.
12-13-2017 02:54 PM
I received this email as well. So was a payment made or i' it all fake?
Jen
12-13-2017 03:11 PM
I get these emails all the time.
The scammer is hoping you'll click the link to cancel the order.
I you click the link, you are sent to a fake site where you'll enter your Pay Pal information and instead of logging into your Pay Pal, you just sent your log in information to the scammer.
Never click links in a email like that, go straight to Pay Pal.
12-13-2017 03:24 PM
I always reply hoping they will respond back.
I was talking with one a few weeks ago and he was giving me his little sales pitch.
To get my money, I had to send $295.00 to cover all the paper work and get the deal started. I told him to take the $295.00 out of the money and send me a check for the rest.
He tried telling me that he couldn't do it that way and tried to convince me it was all legal and give me phone numbers to call to check up on it.
I told him I would forward the information to my friend at the police department to make sure is was legit.
Never heard any more from him.
12-25-2017 08:07 AM
I also just recveived this email...when I went to the "fake site" I also could see that it was NOT the pay pal log in . It took me to the following site;
Beware of this and report it to PayPal at spoof@paypal.com
12-30-2017 05:16 PM
Just got one too. I saw the cancel this transaction opened to an unknown address-not Paypal and closed it immediately.
Phishing scams hurt far far too many people. I sent Paypal the email for them to check out and changed my password!
01-21-2018
02:12 PM
- last edited on
12-07-2022
06:16 PM
by
brian_burke@eba
Same here...
01-23-2018 10:14 AM - edited 01-23-2018 10:17 AM
ALWAYS ALWAYS ALWAYS hover your cursor over the link or button in the email to see where it is really from.
You CANNOT trust the email address at the top and you cannot trust the VISIBLE email in the link.
These can be manipulated.
However, if you hover the cursor over the link or the button, the email program shows you where the link is actually going and if paypal.com or ebay.com are NOT in there, it's fake.
For example...
www.ebay.russkil.com is FAKE
www.payment.paypal.semini.com is FAKE
www.payments.paypal.com is usually legit
www.announcement.ebay.com is usually legit
They usually put the words eBay or paypal in there to make it look more legit but it's ONLY legit if paypal.com or eBay.com IS AT THE END of the hover-URL.
Anything else in the email (in the header or in the message) cannot be trusted to be what it looks like. Only the hover-URL can be trusted (as far as I know, no one's been able to fake that yet because the system is telling you where the link actually goes).
01-27-2018 01:36 PM
I always laugh when I get these (the email they send them to is not my paypal email!) I forward them to spoof at paypal.
If you NEED to check your paypal account. Open a separate tab and go to paypal from there---do not click on any links!
And yes, I get TONS of emails from banks, stores, etc (none of which are real!) all to an email that is not set up for any of them....so I KNOW they are all fake.
And remember MOST real emails will use your real name in their opening line...not 'johndoe2018'. ALWAYS be suspicious!
01-29-2018 08:09 AM