I’ve been getting a lot of “your package has arrived at _____, could not be delivered to address. Click here to speak to representative” or something along those lines. I’m not sure what the ultimate goal is, though, you’re gonna get my routing number and try to redirect my package or some shit?
I think the goal of most of those is to convince you to pay "customs duties" or other "fees."
Good point
Well, we all know the IPS logo looks nothing like that.
I wonder if putting this logo would be more or less successful than making it look like the UPS logo. I can see people assuming there must be an international branch of UPS or something though from the logo looking like UPS's though. Which might convey legitimacy to them instead of how we see it.
I mean unfortunately taking everything with a grain of salt is kinda how most tech adept people are I think
Is this some kind of con research psyop? Sure seems like it. "what things do you notice that tell you it's fake?".
I've seen a US Postal Service spam that would almost fool me. The URL is very close to a real one and when you go to the page (I didn't do it but my coworker did), the page is a very good copy of the real site including the same loading animation and everything.
I am a cynic, so yes, I even manually read urls before clicking but it seems I am the weird one.
It was shortened so wasn't immediately obvious, though not from a common URL shortening service - not that that matters too much. But I'm the same, better to be suspicious first.
Actually, i do too. When i get emails i expand to see the domain the message comes from and ProtonMail is set to ask me if i want to visit the full printed url before it allows the link to open. I have to click an okay button
That isn't weird. This should be default behavior for everyone. If it was fewer people would get caught by scams. I also look at the sender's email. All the ones I've ever received have come from domains not affiliated with the company they purport to represent. I've taught all my non-security savvy friends to do this, too.
I click all URLs for fun. They usually take you to those shitty survey sites. Then I just exit them. The fake links can't do anything unless you let them.
I sure do.
I was expecting a package and an SMS "sorry we missed you" scam caught me off guard.
Luckily the 2nd field in the form was date of birth, which was an immediate red flag.
If it was an age restricted delivery (alcohol, chemicals, kitchen knives or something) I might have gone further.
Lucky!
Did you order from ikea?
Nope! Didn't order anything so was pretty suss.
Hi fellow Swedish!
🇸🇪
No legal info. At least they had to provide their full company name, address amd comtact. It's also pretty likely, that they add their terms and conditions and your right of withdrawal.
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