PHISHING for PayPal
I received this email today. The BASTARDS!
:thumbdown:
Fortunately I played it safe and sent it to PayPal's spoof center before giving any information. They confirmed that it was fraudulent.
BEWARE!
Here's the email:
[FONT=Optima]From View message header detailPayPal <client-232053@paypal.com>
Sent Wednesday, May 25, 2005 6:35 am
To
Cc
Bcc
Subject PayPal Accounts Management
Dear valued PayPal
:thumbdown:Fortunately I played it safe and sent it to PayPal's spoof center before giving any information. They confirmed that it was fraudulent.
BEWARE!
Here's the email:
[FONT=Optima]From View message header detailPayPal <client-232053@paypal.com>
Sent Wednesday, May 25, 2005 6:35 am
To
Cc
Bcc
Subject PayPal Accounts Management
Dear valued PayPal
These emails are usually so badly written that they're completely obvious phishing attempts.
Here's an example from above: "reduce the instance of fraud".
As soon as I read something like that, I know the email itself is fraudulent.
Here's an example from above: "reduce the instance of fraud".
As soon as I read something like that, I know the email itself is fraudulent.
Originally Posted by exceltoexcel,May 26 2005, 09:04 AM
I'm confused? It has a paypal.com address. How can it be fraudulent?
Username: YouWish
Password: NiceTry
etc, etc...
PayPal (or a bank) will not require all that information over again through an email. It'd be pointless. If they're shutting you down, they'll just do it.
I get these quite often in addition to emails supposedly from banks.
If you go to the real PayPal website ,they have an email address you can forward the fake announcement to. They will respond with an email confirming the fact that it was fake.
Internet scams are getting more and more sophisticated, I feel sorry for the people that get sucked into them.
I saw an add for software that will display the true url of emails, along with other information.
If you go to the real PayPal website ,they have an email address you can forward the fake announcement to. They will respond with an email confirming the fact that it was fake.
Internet scams are getting more and more sophisticated, I feel sorry for the people that get sucked into them.
I saw an add for software that will display the true url of emails, along with other information.
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Originally Posted by exceltoexcel,May 26 2005, 11:28 AM
I check the links out they are genuine (at least in what you have here) however I doubt the letter is. I wonder why they would do that? Trojon catching your keystrokes?
it looked suspicious right from the get go.
even the links went right back to paypal.
but the most obvious was the web page going to an http://213.#.#.#. IP address.
I forwarded to spoof@paypal.com
They verified it was not from them...






