Quizzes & Puzzles29 mins ago
Pay Pal Scam?
17 Answers
Today I received an email thanking me for my order for £39.99 for a subscription to Playstation, via PayPal, with whom I have never had an account, a subscription request which I never made. It comes from an email address of lots of letters/[email protected]., which sounds like some sort of gaming site, which I've never had any connection with. Has anybody else had anything similar? I assume it's a scam, but what worries me is that it was sent shortly after I made a purchase on a legitimate (secure) site for a similar amount, which is what is worrying me. Delete and forget?
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by goodgoalie. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.https:/ /www.ju sttrave lcover. com/ind ex.php? xyzid=1 78& _$ja=ts id:6726 9%7ccid :262179 989%7ca gid:195 8707130 9%7ctid :kwd-47 7946252 02%7ccr id:1172 1797882 9%7cnw: g%7crnd :150865 8403865 7692888 %7cdvc: t%7cadp :1t2&am p;gclid =CNjIx8 ex49ICF aMK0wod stwMgw
There are lots of PayPal scams about, GG, so i would just send it to their phishing scam email address, which is on my link, and let them deal with it.
There are lots of PayPal scams about, GG, so i would just send it to their phishing scam email address, which is on my link, and let them deal with it.
Ulm.edu is the domain name of the University of Louisiana at Monroe, with the 'warhawk' bit simply being the nickname appended to services offered for their staff and students (including, for example, their sports bodies and the universities email service).
So either the sending address has been faked or, possibly more likely, their server has been hacked and used for sending out fraudulent requests for payment. Either way it's clearly a scam, with the similarity of the amount requested and one you've just paid out being almost certainly entirely coincidental.
So either the sending address has been faked or, possibly more likely, their server has been hacked and used for sending out fraudulent requests for payment. Either way it's clearly a scam, with the similarity of the amount requested and one you've just paid out being almost certainly entirely coincidental.
Ooops wrong link...Sorry...This is the one :-)
https:/ /www.pa ypal.co m/us/we bapps/m pp/secu rity/re port-pr oblem
https:/
Many thanks, all. Have forwarded it to [email protected], as suggested. Will wait to hear back from them.....
Update. I forwarded the email to [email protected], but heard nothing. Worryingly, today I found an email - addressed with with my full correct name - confirming that I had purchased a subscription with PayPal for £14.96. I have made no such purchase, have never had an account with them, and have never made a purchase through PayPal. This latest email comes from: [email protected], and has an authentic-looking Paypal logo, with a link to click to cancel, which, of course, I'm very suspicious about. Does anybody (Buenchico!) know if intl.paypal is authentic?
Thank you, Ron. I've had a couple of replies from [email protected], to whom I forwarded the suspect mails, but the replies are just generic ones that ask me to log into my account etc etc. I do not have, and never have had a PayPal account - that's why I'm worried!
>>> addressed with with my full correct name
Is your full name in your email address? (e.g. [email protected]). If so, that's one way it could have been obtained. (It could also have been found through hacking into a service you use. For example, if you're with TalkTalk their databases have been hacked at least twice, giving away all of their customers' details).
>>> This latest email comes from: [email protected]
Are you sure? It's easy to fake the 'return' address in an email, so that it appears to have come from a genuine source. You need to go into the detailed email header to check where it's really come from.
>>> confirming that I had purchased a subscription with PayPal for £14.96
As long as £14.96 hasn't disappeared from your bank account that can safely be ignored!
I see nothing to worry about unless you've opened an attachment which came with the email.
Is your full name in your email address? (e.g. [email protected]). If so, that's one way it could have been obtained. (It could also have been found through hacking into a service you use. For example, if you're with TalkTalk their databases have been hacked at least twice, giving away all of their customers' details).
>>> This latest email comes from: [email protected]
Are you sure? It's easy to fake the 'return' address in an email, so that it appears to have come from a genuine source. You need to go into the detailed email header to check where it's really come from.
>>> confirming that I had purchased a subscription with PayPal for £14.96
As long as £14.96 hasn't disappeared from your bank account that can safely be ignored!
I see nothing to worry about unless you've opened an attachment which came with the email.
Thanks, Chris. Yes, my email address is a Hotmail one in the form [email protected], so maybe if some bot is sending out gazzilions of spam, then it's more likely to get through to such an address - it was addressed to my proper first and last name (unlike the one earlier this week). I had a few similar emails a few months ago saying they were receipts for iTunes I'd downloaded (never have0 which I deleted and they stopped. All still worrying, though.