Scam/Phishing Attempt?

I received a message from a member about an item for sale & to contact them outside Ebay. 

However the item is furniture & they are in the UK!

Should I report this & where?

Thanks

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Scam/Phishing Attempt?

Block them.

 

It unlikely to be phishing. If you knew what phishing was you would understand that. It is probably an attempted scam. Ignore. Simple.

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Scam/Phishing Attempt?

I do understand phishing.

What I'm interested in is where I can report it to as it is an ebay "member" & no doubt they will contact many others who innocently might respond - as the item is an older Chiswell unit maybe they think they are targeting an older person with potentially less suspicions.

Message 3 of 9
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Scam/Phishing Attempt?

Buy it's not another ebay member it's just a scam

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Scam/Phishing Attempt?

I also got a message today on my mobile from a UK phone number,  saying to view my message go to a link.

which I didnt of course but older people might.

Message 5 of 9
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Scam/Phishing Attempt?

Also where did they get my mobile number from?

and wheredoI report this?

thanks

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Scam/Phishing Attempt?


@tetibird wrote:

I received a message from a member about an item for sale & to contact them outside Ebay. 

However the item is furniture & they are in the UK!

Should I report this & where?

Thanks


Use the report member feature - attempting to negotiate the sale of a listing outside the ebay ecosystem is strictly prohibited in the terms of use.

Hopefully the offender will eventually be NARU'd.

 

@gailjohn09

 

If the contact method invites you to click on a link you should definitely not do so.

It's probably a phishing expedition trying to induce you to visit a site containing some sort of nasty exploit designed to infect your device with malware.

As to where they got your mobile number who knows?

If you were selling at the time of the big hack in 2014 your details may still be circulating on the dark web.

It may have even been circulated by and old customer as phone info is available via the transaction record.

 

The moral is "never accept lollies from strangers" lol

 

 

 

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Scam/Phishing Attempt?


@gailjohn09 wrote:

I also got a message today on my mobile from a UK phone number,  saying to view my message go to a link.

which I didnt of course but older people might.


Please stop branding "older" people as being suseptable to scams.  Not all of us are numpties when it comes to using the internet.

 

I am 70 and I have never fallen for any scams, either on the net or the many phone scammers that are out there.

Believe me, most of the members who come to the boards with complaints about scammers are the younger generation and it is us oldies who bail them out with information as to what to do.

 

Old does not mean stupid!!

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Scam/Phishing Attempt?


@lyndal1838 wrote:

@gailjohn09 wrote:

I also got a message today on my mobile from a UK phone number,  saying to view my message go to a link.

which I didnt of course but older people might.


Please stop branding "older" people as being suseptable to scams.  Not all of us are numpties when it comes to using the internet.

 

I am 70 and I have never fallen for any scams, either on the net or the many phone scammers that are out there.

Believe me, most of the members who come to the boards with complaints about scammers are the younger generation and it is us oldies who bail them out with information as to what to do.

 

Old does not mean stupid!!


Too right! I'm thinking that's why there is a common saying "young and stupid"! You don't hear people using "old and stupid" (although plenty like to imply that).

 

A casual work colleague of mine came bouncing into work one morning several years ago, grinning from ear to ear. He was late 30's, early 40's at the time. We all asked why he was so happy and he got his phone out and showed us a message he'd received. According to him, he'd won a squillion pounds in the UK lottery. All he had to do was reply with his bank details, including name, address, phone number, then they'd supply an account number for him to send $5,000 which would cover all the taxes, fees and charges associated with sending him the money.

 

It took several of us all day to tell him NOT to reply to the message as it was a scam to steal his money. The only reason he hadn't replied at that point was because he's a hard doer and was planning on going to the bank that afternoon to take out a loan for $5,000. He wanted to make sure the loan was approved before replying. Even when he was leaving to go home, he was still convinced he was a multimillionaire. In the end, one of my other colleagues snatched his phone from him and deleted the message. He was not happy about it, but it was done with the best intentions.

 

I'd supplied him with several websites to look at and was quite insistant he did so. He came back to work the next day and thanked us all for saving him and was quite embarrassed about the whole thing.

 

That is only one incident (of many) where a "not old" person has (almost) fallen for a scam. While some older folk are trusting and do get caught, just as many younger people do too. In fact, these days, older people are less likely to get caught because they are up to date with the news, unlike the younger folk who don't know anything outside Facebook or Instagram. They watch or read about these things in the news, so are aware of them.

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