“If you recently got this text message,” wrote the Guardio team on X, “it’s a sneaky phishing scam designed to hijack your Amazon account.” The link “leads to a high-quality fake Amazon site that ...
An unexpected recall text message pops up on your phone. It mentions a familiar company like Amazon, a specific order and a possible safety issue. As a result, it is meant to grab your attention fast.
IT Management Group identified three broad Amazon Prime Day scams that target membership and ordering info to gain access to your personal identification and banking information: Prime membership ...
A message warning that a recent purchase is unsafe might sound helpful. It could also be a scam. Cybersecurity experts are warning about a phishing scheme targeting Amazon customers with fake product ...
Shoppers who have received a recall text from Amazon in recent weeks may be getting a scam text, according to cybersecurity experts. Several social media users made posts about how they received texts ...
Amazon Prime customers are the latest group of consumers to be targeted by scammers, cybersecurity experts say. According to a Feb. 4 X post from Guardio Security, hackers are impersonating Amazon's ...
The text claims a recent Amazon order was recalled and links to a very real-looking (but fake) sign-in page. Recall messages create panic so you’ll click fast. Legitimate recalls show up inside your ...
If you get a text claiming an Amazon product you purchased is recalled, take heed − it may be a scam. If you get a text claiming an Amazon product you purchased is recalled, take heed − it may be a ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. The scam uses a text message that is deliberately vague about specifying which Amazon parcel. (Charles-McClintock Wilson via Getty ...
If you’re reading this, there’s a good chance you’re one of the over 310 million people in the world who use Amazon — after all, who doesn’t love getting exactly what they need delivered to their ...
TL;DR: An Amazon customer received a damaged 240Hz OLED monitor instead of the 540Hz model ordered and faced a costly return process requiring $600 shipping to a US location. This issue highlights ...