Am I Right To Be Feeling This Way?
Family Life11 mins ago
I suspect I've been scammed. I got an e-mail from Royal Mail (allegedly) asking for small fee payment to deliver a parcel (which I am expecting). Without thinking it through I paid the fee online. I then tried to track the item and it came up "tracking code unknown". It then occurred to me the Royal Mail wouldn't know my e-mail address so I then realised I'd been scammed (**&%$$£***).
Now comes the difficult bit. I immediately rang my Credit Card provider to stop the card I had paid with. That's when I got a third degree interrogation and because my responses didn't tie in with their records they said they couldn't proceed. Getting somewhat angry I eventually got them to lock the card, but before I get a new one I have to respond to something they're sending me in the post. I will now get a deluge of "payment refused" complaints from regular payment transactions on that card until I can give them the new number.
If genuine customers like me have such a problem, why do scammers find it so easy ?
Why is e-life so painful.
I HATE SCAMMERS.
No best answer has yet been selected by Canary42. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.You have a lot of regular payments on your credit card? That's unusual but as they bounce you'll be notified then you can give them an alternative. I would advise against having regular automated payments on a credit card. Very difficult to cancel unless you cancel the whole card like you have done. DDs are much better and safer.
I agree with TTT. Continuous payment authorities are not the best way to make regular payments.
I don't know how scammers find it so easy, I suppose they use your credit card details until it stops working. Or sell your details on a 'sucker list' - be aware that you will probably get a lot more scam emails now.
16:06, this is a blessing in disguise then! you can probably pre empt the payments that are going to bounce before you get the snotty letter/email then convert to DD and you are sorted.
PS Royal mail and probably all the others will not ask for payment by email. They put a card though your door and that tells you how to pay any excess postage.
Although it's maybe not in the spirit of how we are supposed to say things on here gingebeee is absolutely right. It may seem a backhanded compliment but I'm amazed that someone who seems so astute in the news threads will have fallen for this very well known scam that's been publicised a lot, including on here. Same as the one where a child texts that they need money. It keeps happening because the small percentage who fall for it make the whole thing worthwhile.
How do they find it easy? Not sure but I asume some very illegal but easily obtained software is involved.
Scammers are adept at offering a plausible reason for you to part with a small amount of money.
If they succeed one per cent of the time with the millions of hits they send, they win.
The manage because the law of averages is on their side.
Statistically they can't lose,they need a tiny proportion of hits to work to make it worthwhile, which is why their trade is expanding.
Remember, the proportion of the world population using the Internet is only ever going to go up, so their hit rate is only going to grow.
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