dunno... this might just be the first part of the scam to see who's gullible enough to respond... later you might get the "oh... I'm international and my credit card wont work, can we exchange bank account numbers..." or something...
Here at the world headquarters we get a variation on this e-mail about once a week.
So what is the scam they are trying to pull??Hello Good Day,
This is Sam,With regards to your Company i am sending this email Regards to order some (hydraulic bender),i will like to know the type and sizes you have in stock and get me the sales price of one so that i will tell you the quantity i will be ordering, and if you accept credit card as a form of payment.hope to read from you soon about my order request....
With Kind Regards.
Sam M..(Owner)
dunno... this might just be the first part of the scam to see who's gullible enough to respond... later you might get the "oh... I'm international and my credit card wont work, can we exchange bank account numbers..." or something...
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Dave"Opinions are like
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Ask Sammm, since he sent it. I wouldn't trust him, either.
You should look at the IP addresses in the email header to see where it was sent from.
Was it a real email address or some yahoo/gmail web type?
Daily Driver: 2013 Club edition in Pearl White Mica
Lightness? What's that? I drive a PRHT!
Organized cyber-gangs in Eastern Europe are increasingly preying on small and mid-size companies in the United States, setting off a multimillion-dollar online crime wave that has begun to worry the nation's largest financial institutions.
In many cases, the advisory warned, the scammers infiltrate companies in a similar fashion: They send a targeted e-mail to the company's controller or treasurer, a message that contains either a virus-laden attachment or a link that -- when opened -- surreptitiously installs malicious software designed to steal passwords. Armed with those credentials, the crooks then initiate a series of wire transfers, usually in increments of less than $10,000 to avoid banks' anti-money-laundering reporting requirements.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn...l?hpid=topnews
Mick,
It looks like you aren't the only one getting these ( LINK HERE, towards the bottom in the "unrelated news" paragraph... wording it exactly the same ), so it's most likely a scam...
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Dave"Opinions are like
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