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Your creditcard have been suspended
Saturday evening I open my mail and had some mails awaiting me, most of them was spam(even though I have set my settings to hard)
One of these was a typical phising mail It suppused to come from my bank It said in danish(not perfekt grammar) that I had paid for some illegal stuff and thereby my credit card had been suspended It's only one thing to do with mails like this one-erase without opening it. However, something made me a little worried, my first 4 numbers in my credit card was in that mail like this 1234-xxxx-xxxx-xxxx And that made me a little nervous, have one of the pages where I have used my credit card been hacked?? Markus |
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It's just the usual phishing e-mail. I get loads of them. The lamest one claiming that my Adobe software is out of date. Click Here to Update!:haha: My Adobe software updates itself automatically MORON!:rotfl2: If you are in real doubt, call your card issuer with the number on the card. Or use it to buy something at a brick and mortar store. |
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It is a possibility.Of course if they had your card number they would really have no reason to fish it from you.They would need the number and the three or four digit number on the back in order to use it.The scam sounds pretty low ball by saying that you purchased illegal items that is a scare tactic to fool fools. They where hoping I'm sure that you would send in your card number and extra code(forget what they call that CVT or something). I would not worry about it to much obviously your account is fine and there are no charges on it that you do not permit. I do not know where you are going though not every site is reliable. It most likely is just someone fishing and not related to any place that you have purchased things from. Interesting thing though is that I never get any phishing scams in my e-mail. I hate to say it but I bet that those phishing scams work on a lot of people.Not every person that has an e-mail account is the sharpest tool in the shed. When you go to a physical store you should watch the clerk like a hawk some will try and swipe your card on a small reader that stores the information on your card to be mined later then they take that data and a card machine and make a another card.By mining the data they can crack it and find out your pin number and everything.Only allow a clerk to use the actual card reader(in most cases you are the one that does this) if they try to hide that they a swiping the card do not leave that place until you contact the police. Iwould avoid places where you hand the card to someone and they are out of your site they can either swap the card with a reader.These readers are very small they can fit in the palm of your hand.Some of these scanners are so small they can be glued on top of a legitimate scanner like at a gas pump or ATM that way the machine operates normally and the card gets scanned twice once by the legitimate seller and by the person that placed the illegal scanner. It is known as skimming. Here is a cheesy video but it explains how it works.Watch closely.The kind that gets glued to the front of an ATM or gas pump you just have to look closely for an extra gap that should not be there. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U0w_ktMotlo Here is an ATM type skimmer http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N5IXANgr6Co If you have a card with an RFID(the kind you wave in front of a reader) you may as well drop your pants because nearly any device such as a smart phone could have a program that allows them to read your info and they only need to get within a few feet of your RFID.At least you can watch a person who tries to slight of hand swipe your card with a skimmer and then promptly break their fingers then knock their teeth out.I will do that to any person that tries that crap with me and I do not care if I get arrested for it. |
Thank you for your answer.
Next time I will copy their IP-address and see where it's origin is. And I'm going to talk to my bank about it. They can see all of my transactions that I have made using my credit card. Markus |
If it was the first four digits, don't worry. These are generic, common to another zilion credit card numbers. It identifies the credit card sub-type, as in "regular" or "Gold", or whatever. Your individual card number is composed by the "x"s they are not showing, because they don't have them :03:.
I'd imagine they'd use the most common type, which happens to be the same as yours. Call the credit card issuer just to put your mind at ease, if for nothing else. I wouldn't worry about it. Quote:
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The first 6 digits of a credit card number are known as the Issuer Identification Number (IIN), previously known as bank identification number (BIN), issued under the ISO/IEC 7812 standard. These identify the institution that issued the card to the card holder.
The IIN ranges used by the major card schemes are:
Dont sweat it. |
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Phisherman! Oy Vay!:-?:stare: |
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