We have noticed that an account has been setup on our system which was created to process the order that you placed with us. The order either came from our website or through our eBay/Amazon marketplace accounts. If you would like to be permanently removed from our system then please click on the following link and all of your details will be automatically removed. Remove
GizzmoHeaven is firmly committed to respecting your privacy. We do not share your information with any third party and all of your details are protected by the relevant Data Protection Laws. If you have any questions, please read our Terms & Conditions.
If you are happy for your account to stay on our system then you don't need to take any further action. If would like to receive our newsletter to be informed of our deals and special offers then please click on the following link Newsletter Subscribe
Many thanks for your past custom and I hope that we can be of service again.
Best Regards
Richard Kay
Managing Director
Please just click on the following link to go to www.gizzmoheaven.com
The spammer uses a computer to generate any feasable combination of letters & words, and unfortunately, it does quite often come up with a genuine email address. This one eventually connected to your personal email addy, sorry, but there's nothing you can do but delete, delete, and delete.
Think of all the places where you've willingly handed over your email details: -
online shops
online e-petitions
charity websites
facebook
twitter
Answerbank
Any other online 'special interest group' forum
Any of these organisations could have sold their database of user emails to other organisations. The more it is passed around, the more likely it is that the data gets into the wrong hands.
Note that facebook has an option where it 'helps' you to find your friends' FB accounts by (get this) accessing your email address book on your computer and using those addresses to search its own database and present you with a list.
If they have software capable of interrogating your computer remotely, then you can be pretty sure that hackers and spammers have their own equivalents, although it may require a phoney website or an incautious click on a dodgy email link to establish the data connection to your computer.
A 'click here to unsubscribe' type invitation from a company you -know- you have never shopped from or communicated with is obviously suspicious.