Gone phishing?
DiodeDick | 25/02/2022 19:21:15 |
61 forum posts 10 photos | I have received an invitation, allegedly from Santander, inviting me to confirm my login details, etc. I do not do online banking and I have no account with Santander. Gang warily, Dick
|
Peter Greene | 25/02/2022 23:54:17 |
865 forum posts 12 photos | Level-1 scam email. Won't fool anyone with any sense but they figure there's always someone ... |
RMA | 26/02/2022 10:29:55 |
332 forum posts 4 photos | Bit of a no brainer if you don't have an account with them. No bank will email for confirmation of your details. Same thing with the numerous phone calls about my Amazon account......which I don't have! |
Steviegtr | 26/02/2022 15:58:44 |
![]() 2668 forum posts 352 photos | I weekly get please contact DHL. Then from same No Hermes. All sorts of delivery companies, all the same No. Stupid thing is , it usually follows when i have ordered from ebay. So makes me think they some how know when people are ordering. Luckily I have Bitdefender running on the P.C. If there is anything dodgy it tells me. I just ignore them now. Steve. |
SillyOldDuffer | 26/02/2022 16:36:51 |
10668 forum posts 2415 photos | Posted by RMA on 26/02/2022 10:29:55:
Bit of a no brainer if you don't have an account with them. ... More dangerous if you do have an account, and triple dangerous if - by chance - you happen to have an open query with your bank, delivery company, Amazon, Pharmacy, BT, or Tax authority etc etc etc. As it costs almost nothing to send millions of emails the bad guys can randomly spray them across the internet. Sooner or later one of them lands on an agitated customer who is expecting his bank or whatever to get in touch to sort out an ongoing real problem. When this happens, the dud email is much more likely to be accepted at face value. Another variant depends on information collected from internet users. Naive users often leak addresses and other information that can be used to make scam emails look far more authentic. Also, dishonest internet sellers harvest and sell private data to criminals. Try not to share personal information on the internet, and especially not with dodgy websites. Unwise to think clever chaps like us will always spot confidence tricks. It's not true! Slow down, read it carefully, don't respond to suspicious requests, and double check everything. Be extra careful if already upset by a real problem because judgement suffers when we're full of adrenaline! Dave |
old mart | 26/02/2022 20:59:59 |
4655 forum posts 304 photos | No genuine firm will ask you to send them your log on details. |
Robin | 27/02/2022 10:21:17 |
![]() 678 forum posts | Santander have this department who ring you up and then ask you to go through security. If you don't do it the nightmare begins. Their real job is to your make your life so miserable that you close your, "Free Business Banking Forever" account. An offer they have really come to regret. The mysterious caller cannot be contacted through their usual 'phone line, you have to use the "special" number that goes to Vodaphone Voice mail after half an hour or so. Meanwhile the bank sends you complicated forms to fill in written in Bankese gibberish. Fail to send them on time and they freeze your account. No kidding. I have been frozen twice. Eventually they will answer their phone. "We saw PayPal activity on your account and assumed you were a Venezuelan cocaine dealer trying to launder his illicit gains!" "Go to my web site and you will find a shop that only takes PayPal". "Okay we will unfreeze you". "Is that it?"
|
RMA | 27/02/2022 10:24:11 |
332 forum posts 4 photos | Posted by SillyOldDuffer on 26/02/2022 16:36:51:
Posted by RMA on 26/02/2022 10:29:55:
Bit of a no brainer if you don't have an account with them. ... More dangerous if you do have an account, and triple dangerous if - by chance - you happen to have an open query with your bank, delivery company, Amazon, Pharmacy, BT, or Tax authority etc etc etc. As it costs almost nothing to send millions of emails the bad guys can randomly spray them across the internet. Sooner or later one of them lands on an agitated customer who is expecting his bank or whatever to get in touch to sort out an ongoing real problem. When this happens, the dud email is much more likely to be accepted at face value. Another variant depends on information collected from internet users. Naive users often leak addresses and other information that can be used to make scam emails look far more authentic. Also, dishonest internet sellers harvest and sell private data to criminals. Try not to share personal information on the internet, and especially not with dodgy websites. Unwise to think clever chaps like us will always spot confidence tricks. It's not true! Slow down, read it carefully, don't respond to suspicious requests, and double check everything. Be extra careful if already upset by a real problem because judgement suffers when we're full of adrenaline! Dave
|
RMA | 27/02/2022 10:33:03 |
332 forum posts 4 photos | Santander will never contact you this way. They make a point of reminding account holders regularly. If anyone calls you and states they are from the bank, end the call and call the bank yourself. You will have a rigorous security check, but that is to protect you. BTW, personal details are sold all the time, even the DVLA do this and we can do nothing to stop it. If you get an email, just hover over the sender and see where it came from. |
Hopper | 27/02/2022 11:12:48 |
![]() 7881 forum posts 397 photos | Posted by Steviegtr on 26/02/2022 15:58:44:
I weekly get please contact DHL. Then from same No Hermes. All sorts of delivery companies, all the same No. Stupid thing is , it usually follows when i have ordered from ebay. So makes me think they some how know when people are ordering. Luckily I have Bitdefender running on the P.C. If there is anything dodgy it tells me. I just ignore them now. Steve. I had something similar a few weeks back. Every time I ordered something from eBay I would get one or two text messages in the next 24 hours telling my my parcel had been dispatched and click on this link for tracking details. The link of course was some dodgy looking gibberish and not any shipping company's so was promptly deleted. I have full Norton antivirus on my computer so not sure how they knew I had just ordered something, several times. But did a full system virus scan with Norton and no texts since . So something was buggy there. It's a constant war and sadly they do catch a lot of people out. Sometimes to the tune of hundreds of thousands of beer tokens. Some are elderly and confused types (why I have to watch out!) but many others are people who you would think should know better but get deceived by unscrupulous experts. Total value of 100 million dollars a year in Australia, which probably makes it a leading national industry. But total fraud in UK is a staggering 190 BILLION pounds a year. That's double the value of the UK car manufacturing industry! But with no manufacturing costs to deduct. |
Please login to post a reply.
Want the latest issue of Model Engineer or Model Engineers' Workshop? Use our magazine locator links to find your nearest stockist!
Sign up to our newsletter and get a free digital issue.
You can unsubscribe at anytime. View our privacy policy at www.mortons.co.uk/privacy
You can contact us by phone, mail or email about the magazines including becoming a contributor, submitting reader's letters or making queries about articles. You can also get in touch about this website, advertising or other general issues.
Click THIS LINK for full contact details.
For subscription issues please see THIS LINK.