Fake eBay e-mails
Posted: Wed Feb 09, 2005 2:16 am
Hi everyone, this message goes specially to those of us who are registered and use eBay regularly...
From time to time we all receive fake e-mails claiming to be from various sources (banks, e-commerce sites, etc.). I have received several such e-mail from "eBay" (well, idiots pretending to be from eBay) so, whenever I receive something asking me to log in there, I just report the e-mail.
eBay will, from time to time, send you e-mail advertisements (like special discounts if you list an item starting £1, etc.). They also send you "watch notice" e-mails telling you that some auction you're watching is going to end.
EBay has never sent me a real e-mail asking me to update anything.
This is all very obvious. So why am I telling you this? Because today I received a spoof "ebay" e-mail that freaked me out. The link it provided started the same way all eBay safety tutorials tell you a proper eBay link should (even with https://, plus the proper server, etc.). The language was exactly what you've come to expect from them. All in all, this one almost had me (the link was precisely what eBay tells you it should be!)
And yet, since the e-mail was still "suspicious" (giving a link for updating account info) I reported it to eBay and guess what... It's a new and admittedly more sofisticated spoof.
So, just to reinforce: DO NOT trust any e-mails telling you to update profiles, etc. ALWAYS contact the company that supposedly sent you the e-mail and ask them what's happening. NEVER access any type of account or password-protected site (even a forum likes this one...) from an e-mail link.
That's it I guess. Please share your spoof e-mail stories so we can all learn
Cheers!
From time to time we all receive fake e-mails claiming to be from various sources (banks, e-commerce sites, etc.). I have received several such e-mail from "eBay" (well, idiots pretending to be from eBay) so, whenever I receive something asking me to log in there, I just report the e-mail.
eBay will, from time to time, send you e-mail advertisements (like special discounts if you list an item starting £1, etc.). They also send you "watch notice" e-mails telling you that some auction you're watching is going to end.
EBay has never sent me a real e-mail asking me to update anything.
This is all very obvious. So why am I telling you this? Because today I received a spoof "ebay" e-mail that freaked me out. The link it provided started the same way all eBay safety tutorials tell you a proper eBay link should (even with https://, plus the proper server, etc.). The language was exactly what you've come to expect from them. All in all, this one almost had me (the link was precisely what eBay tells you it should be!)
And yet, since the e-mail was still "suspicious" (giving a link for updating account info) I reported it to eBay and guess what... It's a new and admittedly more sofisticated spoof.
So, just to reinforce: DO NOT trust any e-mails telling you to update profiles, etc. ALWAYS contact the company that supposedly sent you the e-mail and ask them what's happening. NEVER access any type of account or password-protected site (even a forum likes this one...) from an e-mail link.
That's it I guess. Please share your spoof e-mail stories so we can all learn
Cheers!