I received this mail. It is fake and shouldn't be trusted (as you might have suspected your self)
This is the text:
"Dear PayPal . valued member,
Because of unusual number of invalid login attempts on you account, we had to believe that, there might be some security problems with your account.
We have decided to put an verification process to ensure your identity and your account security.
Please click on continue to the verification process and ensure your account security. It is all about your security."
etc. etc. Don't respond!!!!!
Paul
warning pay pal fake mail
Moderator: Andreas Wideroe
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I get about 20 of these a day.
A good rule is to check if the embedded URL is the same as what it looks like (see the code). It never is.
Another rule is that if it doesn't contain your name, but only Dear valued member etc. it's fake.
/Andreas
A good rule is to check if the embedded URL is the same as what it looks like (see the code). It never is.
Another rule is that if it doesn't contain your name, but only Dear valued member etc. it's fake.
/Andreas
Andreas Wideroe
Filmshooting | Com - Administrator
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The name is no longer a valid test either. I have recieved spoofs containing my first and last name. The email address I used for ebay was harvested from someones computer that I had a transaction with in the past. I hate it when people save your email address and name for one transaction. The spammers have become very specific, but they still have difficulties with the english language. The best spoof is still a giveaway when you read the text. I changed the my associated email account that was used for ebay in the past. I still monitor what comes into the old one account. They are getting rather aggresive in their methods, but at least I know that all messages to that email address are spoofs. I report them daily, as some are getting too good not to report.awand wrote: ...Another rule is that if it doesn't contain your name, but only Dear valued member etc. it's fake.
/Andreas
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Hi,
the problem is that some of those eBay/paypal-fake-emails now only contain links to ebay/paypal! But only on the first glance since the links are like this:
http://signin.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll ... server.cn/
(With a special thanks to eBay and Paypal for offering those redirect-services on their webpages at all and hence making their services more secure every day!)
Jörg
the problem is that some of those eBay/paypal-fake-emails now only contain links to ebay/paypal! But only on the first glance since the links are like this:
http://signin.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll ... server.cn/
(With a special thanks to eBay and Paypal for offering those redirect-services on their webpages at all and hence making their services more secure every day!)
Jörg
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actually for people who use a email client that support html mails recognising inaccurate links is very difficult.
best protection is to *never* click on a link if in involves money transactions (ebay, paypal, bank etc). instead, open a new browser window and type in the url manually (or click on your bookmark)
++ christoph ++
best protection is to *never* click on a link if in involves money transactions (ebay, paypal, bank etc). instead, open a new browser window and type in the url manually (or click on your bookmark)
++ christoph ++
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And don't use stored passwords or use session remembering. Especially not on laptops. If the thing gets stolen first steps into your account are easy for the thieves. Then you have to rely on missing transaction codes. Don't scan these and don't store these on the same computer. And don't show the kids, housekeepers etc where these are stored otherwise the money leak can be closer than you expect and want to find out.
Kind regards,
André
André