>>> addressed with with my full correct name
Is your full name in your email address? (e.g.
[email protected]). If so, that's one way it could have been obtained. (It could also have been found through hacking into a service you use. For example, if you're with TalkTalk their databases have been hacked at least twice, giving away all of their customers' details).
>>> This latest email comes from:
[email protected]
Are you sure? It's easy to fake the 'return' address in an email, so that it appears to have come from a genuine source. You need to go into the detailed email header to check where it's
really come from.
>>> confirming that I had purchased a subscription with PayPal for £14.96
As long as £14.96 hasn't disappeared from your bank account that can safely be ignored!
I see nothing to worry about unless you've opened an attachment which came with the email.