I must have learned it wrong. I highlight the message, get the
properties-details-message source, select all, copy, close, close,
forward, bottom of message, paste, direct it to spoof@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
either
paypal.com or ebay.com. Always get their nice thank-you note.
--
Frank ess
Justis wrote:
> Ebay instructs you to open the email, do not click on any links,
> and then forward it to spoof@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Lately there's been a lot of phoney Ebay emails sent out telling
> you that your account has been restricted or it's overdue etc. The
> emails look official. I still have them, scanned for viruses and
> tucked away on a floppy.
> Not as many are being received after notifying Ebay. Still the odd
> one though.
> "msg" <msg@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote in message
> news:13qc8jue15r9aaf@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>> eclyma wrote:
>>> I'm not a volume buyer, maybe a dozen or so, but all have been
>>> excellent transactions. My buying is further reduced by the
>>> "Paypal registration required" by some sellers. I will not
>>> register as I've had my I.D. with Ebay compromised by Paypal
>>> hackers when I never had a Paypal account. I will still deal with
>>> those who accept USPS money orders.
>>
>> Never heard of a true PayPal hack; the 'compromises' stem from
>> 'phi****ng' emails sent to PayPal users who don't check the email
>> headers for routing and origin and fall prey by visiting sham
>> sites' URLs. When using the PayPal website, the URLs should always
>> start with 'https'.
>>
>> Michael


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