Harringay online

Harringay, Haringey - So Good they Spelt it Twice!

Recently, I have started getting messages purporting to come from Amazon confirming that my orders xxxxxx which I never made have been cancelled.

Example -


 Your order has been successfully canceled.

You just canceled order 32-8312-3948 placed on June 13, 2017.

Status: CANCELED

Thank you for visiting Amazon.com!

 I assume that this is an attempt at a scam but are other people getting these ?

Is there any danger in just ignoring them ?

Views: 635

Reply to This

Replies to This Discussion

If you are an Amazon user you would probably have used Amazon's UK site - this is from the US given the spelling and website.  I think you can ignore it - if you have an amazon account you can check by login in and view your account history.  Also, perhaps tell Amazon you are receiving these emails - see this link on suspicious emails https://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/help/customer/display.html?nodeId=20148...

Thanks Charlotte.

Just because a scammer is illiterate doesn't necessarily mean that s/he's an American amazon.

I've just deleted the link behind the order number above since it looked like that's what the scammers wanted to guide people towards.

I think scam emails of various sorts are just part of life these days. We just need to keep our wits about us and pass on anything that looks suspicious.

Thanks Hugh. Careless of me

It's a malware thing as opposed to a scam. If you clicked on the link it would download the malware code and would then your email address book to send on more messages.

Thanks Antoinette.

I'm not sure if I ever clicked on the link but I doubt it. I've run a full McAffee scan and it didn't detect anything so hopefully I'm clean

You'd soon know if you had been infected as people you've not heard from in years will suddenly start coming out of the woodwork asking why you sent them a dodgy email!  It happened to me last year and was quite embarrassing.  I mentioned the problem to one of my network security colleagues in the lift this morning and there are apparently a least a dozen different Amazon related issues....some are phishing emails (where they try to get you to hand over bank/card details) as well as malware and scams.  The golden rule, however, applies to all.....don't click on any links and don't reply to emails. 

I have had loads of these, despite my never using Amazon, as I prefer to use companies which pay taxes...BUT you can usually see from the email sender's address that it is not from an Amazon source.

If you can be bothered, a reply of FOFF normally works !
You shouldn't reply to any message that is suspicious as you verify the account is in use which will generate more emails not reduce or eliminate them
They are scams we keep getting ones from PayPal and tax refunds all scams asking you to tap on the link which you never do

I have been getting lots of those messages too. Luckily my Hotmail catches them and they go into my junk file. I have been reporting them as phishing emails.

RSS

Advertising

© 2024   Created by Hugh.   Powered by

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service