EBAY PHISHING EXAMPLE
MESSAGE FROM EBAY MEMBER
This genuine looking email is a masquerade. As soon as you clicked on “respond”, you were directed to an exact clone of eBay and your personal information was stolen. These messages come in different styles and writings. Go manually to ebay.com and check your private messages there and you will see if its real or not.
UPDATE YOUR CREDIT CARD INFO
Look at the link here. It looks as valid as it could. It is written http://signin.ebay.com, but this written link actually points again, yes, to a clone of ebay. This is done with a href code in html coding. I will show you an example. Click on this link:
The Address shows ebay, but you were linked to facebook. I have linked you to facebook, but Con artist will link you to dupes of legit business websites and scam you. Beware what you click, your browser shows you the link in the left bottom corner if you only point over the link, without clicking it.
RE-ENTER ACCOUNT INFORMATION
This whole email was actually an image which referred you to a scam website if you clicked anywhere on it. Your mouse cursor changed to a “hand”, if you have this set as default when you point over a link.
SUMMARY
Before you buy an item, check the previous items sold by this seller. Chances are if he was selling unrelated and different items than he is selling now, this ebay ID might be a victim of phishing and is now used by a con artist. Banks, payment processors, eBay all alike will never send you emails to enter your personal information! If you do receive a important notice from eBay or bank and you are in doubt if its real, close the email, start a new session with your internet browser, and manually type in the address of your bank, ebay or wherever the notice claims to come from. If you got a private message to your email from a supposed ebay member, do the same as mentioned above. Manually type the address of ebay.com and check your private messages there! In this phishing example we used eBay as one of the most popular phishing places, but phishing frauds are all over the web, so beware.
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