Cheshire Figment
<font color=red><marquee behavior=alternate>Friend
- Joined
- Jan 12, 2001
- Messages
- 38,638
Today I received an e-mail from PayPal that said that my backup credit card had expired. I noted three things in their message which led me to believe it was true.
1. Instead of a bland "Dear Customer" it had my full name in the body of the message.
2. It actually gave the last four digits of the credit card number.
3. There were no links at all in the message. I was told to log in to PayPal as I normally would and then it gave several steps to follow once I was in.
I did log in through a bookmark and saw that the expiration date on the credit card was 5/05 and so I looked at my new card and made the necessary changes. Anyway, my account is now up to date and I have not been phished.
1. Instead of a bland "Dear Customer" it had my full name in the body of the message.
2. It actually gave the last four digits of the credit card number.
3. There were no links at all in the message. I was told to log in to PayPal as I normally would and then it gave several steps to follow once I was in.
I did log in through a bookmark and saw that the expiration date on the credit card was 5/05 and so I looked at my new card and made the necessary changes. Anyway, my account is now up to date and I have not been phished.
