Spams & Scams Posted by egingell on Jan 11, 2023 Posted in: Android. Last Updated on Oct 6, 2023 Chances are, USPS doesn’t have your phone number, so don’t click the link in this text message. In this case, go directly to https://www.usps.com/tracking/ and put in the tracking number you were given. This one almost fooled me since this website is hosted by DreamHost, but that email address is suspicious. Please check the sender before clicking on any links in emails such as this or, better yet, go directly to their website from your bookmarks. DreamHost’s website is https://www.dreamhost.com/. Oh no! My Wells Fargo account has been suspended! Oh, wait, I don’t have a Wells Fargo account. Please check emails and text messages. Wells Fargo’s website is https://www.wellsfargo.com/. This was one email. My name is not William, it’s Eric, and I did not sign up for Moovly. I don’t know what that Amazon stuff is there for. Funny… I don’t remember signing up for clinical trials. That’s not a Google email address and I did not initiate a deactivation request. That’s not one of my email addresses. It must be a in the BCCs. If you get an email not addressed to you, it’s probably spam. That’s not an Amazon email address. Also, that’s not my email address. My name is not Kim Schneider. This is a legit email, but the one who left the voicemail was likely a scammer or just had the wrong number. I don’t know what’s going on here. “Special Flanders”? https://www.healthcare.gov/ is proper, specialflanders.com is not. Believe it or not, I don’t know anybody named Mary. This is just spam, plain and simple. My name still isn’t William and… if this were legit, I’m sure they wouldn’t use zeros instead of Os in the subject. If you didn’t sign up for any “extended warranty”, don’t click the links. Also, if they address you by your email address instead of your name, that’s a big red flag. The story is bogus. Also, my name isn’t Vertical Skinny. It looks legit, but Blizzard’s website is https://www.battle.net/, not .com and that’s not the email address I used for my Blizzard account and I never had Diablo 3. It sure looks legit, but I sure as hell didn’t owe them $2,000. Plus, that wasn’t the email address I gave them. Do not click links in suspicious emails. Instead go directly to their website. Sprint’s website is (or was, now they’re owned by T-Mobile) https://www.sprint.com/. Emails from Netflix are @Netflix.com, plus addressing me by my email address is still a big red flag. And my name is not Eric Muska. Sweet! $10.5mil!… Hold on, that’s not a legit Back of America email address. I’m pretty sure their emails come from @bankofamerica.com, definitely not @yahoo.fr and especially not from @livesexbabes.com. That’s not my Netflix email address. Again, no Diablo 3 and @email.com is definitely not Blizzard. IRS doesn’t just randomly send out tax refunds. If they send you anything, they’ll call it a “stimulus” and they already have your address, so they’re not going to ask you for it. My “packages (sic) is undel1verable (sic)”. Apparently the “addres (sic)” didn’t “mmth (sic)” the zip code. This one almost got me. Luckily, I checked the domain in the address bar before submitting my credit card info. Posts navigation ← FFX-2 Chocobo Ranch and Dungeon Guardian Tales: Switch vs Android →