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Email scams via eBay ask a question 
 

There is an impressive phishing(stealing someone's identity by pretending to be 
from an authority site the potential victim uses) attempt email currently doing 
the rounds on eBay.  Wary buyers and sellers already aware of several phishing 
attempts are now a lot more quick to delete and mark a suspicious email as 
spam.  The scammers are aware of this and are always improvising with new 
methods to steal people's identities.  The first step is to get their phishing 
attempt email into a user's mailbox, they may have obtained the user's email 
address from a previous sale, a previous query or from other scammers .  The 
subject of the email may sound like a legit subject coming from eBay.  A sample 
of the email is below:

You've received a question about eBay item #(Random item ID here)

Dear member,

How much is the shipping to Random place, Random country,
Let me know because I'm online and I can pay you right now.
- Inserted Powerseller ID
        
Did this answer your question? If not, let the seller know.

        
Item URL: [random url]
Item Id:        [random item ID]
End time:       random date
Buyer:
        
Inserted Powerseller ID
 

There are some simple rules to identify that this is indeed a phishing attempt. 
 First off
i)  It is addressed to a "dear member", eBay users should alredy be aware that 
their real names are usually included with any communication with eBay, to 
thwart just these type of scenarios.

ii)  As usual the respond to link doesn't lead to eBay but to the Scammer's 
phishing site where the victim's login details will be harvested for the 
scammer's nefarious purposes if the mistake is made to login to the 
aforementioned url, which is what the entire phishing attempt was all about in 
the first place.

iii)  The item url and item ID do not match, normally the item ID is located 
within the item url, the fact that the two are uncorrelated is a dead giveaway.

The Powerseller status ID inserted into the email is to give the idea of trust 
but in reality, the real Powerseller has no idea of any such item, nor that 
their name or account is being used for these purposes, and it may indeed be 
that the Powerseller themselves may have fallen victim to a phishing attempt, 
as it sometimes happens hence scammers use their usernames after obtaining 
their stolen details, in order to earn trust with the potential victim.

 
 Mr D Stevens is a reviewer at http://www.scammersexposed.com/  Email scams 
 Keywords: Email scams, scams, internet scams, job scams, phishing, internet 
scam, online fraud, credit card fraud, fraudulent jobs, Mike Dillard, 
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 Article contains 407 words

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