Quizzes & Puzzles14 mins ago
Bank account scam emails
16 Answers
Scam emails have featured on AB before, but they are particularly bad again just now. I've had about a dozen in the past week telling me for some obscure reason my bank account has been suspended, and asking me to click a link and complete some details to reactivate my account. Not likely!! Are other readers being plagued in this way? What indications are there (if any) that emails are fraudulent and is there anything else one can usefully do but delete them?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.If you don't have an account with them, it's a scam!
If it's badly written, it's a scam.
Unless the email specifically mentions your name, it will be a scam. Hover over any link and you will find some obscure overseas website address.
You can report them to one of several sites but I no longer bother I'm afraid
If it's badly written, it's a scam.
Unless the email specifically mentions your name, it will be a scam. Hover over any link and you will find some obscure overseas website address.
You can report them to one of several sites but I no longer bother I'm afraid
If you're receiving your mail via a client program (such as Outlook, Outlook Express, Windows Live Mail or Thunderbird), rather than by using a web-based system, you can install Mailwasher to help prevent all types of spam from being downloaded to your computer:
http://www.mailwasher.net/
Further, by clicking on File > Properties > Details > Message Source (in Outlook Express - it's probably similar with other email clients) you can look through the headers to see where the mail really came from.
Also remember that:
(a) many (most?) banks don't know the email addresses of their customers (so they can't possibly send emails to them) ; and
(b) any legitimate email will start with something like "Dear Mr Coldicote" and not with "Dear Customer".
Chris
http://www.mailwasher.net/
Further, by clicking on File > Properties > Details > Message Source (in Outlook Express - it's probably similar with other email clients) you can look through the headers to see where the mail really came from.
Also remember that:
(a) many (most?) banks don't know the email addresses of their customers (so they can't possibly send emails to them) ; and
(b) any legitimate email will start with something like "Dear Mr Coldicote" and not with "Dear Customer".
Chris
-- answer removed --
A lot of good advice here, thank you. I had noticed that emails didn't address me by name. One can get used to these wretched things, though I feel some concern for beginners who may have very little experience of the internet. Chris makes an interesting point about looking through the headers to see where emails really come from. Pity there doesn't seem to be a 'service' one can then refer them to - or is there?
Hi coldicote- there is an address you can forward these to.
There is this one:
http://www.millersmiles.co.uk/submit.php
Or most banks have an address, usually beginning spoof@... or suspicious emails@...
There is this one:
http://www.millersmiles.co.uk/submit.php
Or most banks have an address, usually beginning spoof@... or suspicious emails@...