is this a common one?
Just as common as the old "you need to login to your bank account and confirm a few things because we detected fraud on your account"
I have had three allegedly from paypal, contacted them and was told iffy and asked me to send to paypal, which I did with the oters. Paypal confirmed that they were phishing emails.
What is meant by checking headers?
As in originating email address.
OK this is going to sound silly but where is this? yes, when I open an email i shows the sender, but how does the untrained eye know if it is genuine or not. My paypal fakes ones looked real and came from a .uk
Phising email address shown; "Paypal" <Service@paypal.co.uk>
Genuine email; spoof@paypal.com" <spoof@paypal.com>
Easiest way is the way the email starts. eGay, paypal and your bank will address you directly, I.E. Dear Vamps. Most spoof emails don't show as paypal.co.uk, the ones I've had are from something like paypalservice@ukpaypal.com.
Well mine did and the genuine one was from a .com. The following is a phishig email received and confrimed as such by paypal........
Paypal Security CenterWednesday, 9 September, 2009 6:29 PM
From: "Paypal" <Service@paypal.co.uk>Add sender to ContactsTo: undisclosed-recipients
paypal Security Center
We were unable to process your most recent payment. Did you recently change your bank, phone number or credit card?.
To ensure that your service is not interrupted, please update your account information today by clicking here. Or contact PayPal(r) Member Services Team. We're available 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.
If you have recently updated your records, please disregard this message as we are processing the changes you have made.
Regards,
PayPal(r) Member Services Team
If this email is inappropriate or in any way violates PayPal(r) policy, please help protect other paypal community members by reporting it to us immediately.