Hello,
These types of attacks are common and generally unrelated to the mail
server hosting your mail services. If you would like me to confirm
that there has been no internal malicious activity, contact me via my
personal email address or support and I will be happy to inspect the
origin
When in doubt you can forward suspicious emails that appear to be from
PayPal to sp...@paypal.com and they'll reply back to let you know if it
was a scam or not.
--
Richard Gaskin
Fourth World
LiveCode training and consulting: http://www.fourthworld.com
Webzine for LiveCode developers: http
Whenever I get an email like this I immediately look at the original
source and headers. Always look at the HREF addresses hidden in the
message body.
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Paul Hibbert wrote:
> Some of these attacks are very clever and try to make you click their
> links because you panic thinking more about the money than your internet
> security.
OKay.
This mail seemed very suspicious. At least, genuine messages from Paypal
are written in french, as I am a fren
stephen barncard wrote:
> do you use a unique email for paypal?
Yes. And the received message was not sent in to my Paypal address.
> If not, then it could be just a guess by the criminal that you even have
> an account and just sent to that email.. -- does it include your full
> name?
Not
Ignore it! However, you should keep a regular check on your PayPal account, go
direct to PP by typing their address into a browser, never from a link.
I get the same type of email occasionally, probably many others on this list do
too.
It's an attack aimed at getting you to respond, to log on t
do you use a unique email for paypal? If not, then it could be just a
guess by the criminal that you even have an account and just sent to that
email.. -- does it include your full name?
On Wed, Feb 27, 2013 at 10:11 AM, Medard wrote:
> "Receipt for your PayPal payment to Thiago La Vega"
>
> un