The Scamdex Scam Email Archive X

Subject:  PayPal Account - Suspicios Activity
From:  "PayPal" <security@paypal.com>
Date:  Thu, 01 Feb 2007 13:22:23 -0800
Category:  Generic
Date Added:  2016-07-20 20:23:07

An Email with the Subject "PayPal Account - Suspicios Activity" was received in one of Scamdex's honeypot email accounts on Thu, 01 Feb 2007 13:22:23 -0800 and has been classified as a Generic Scam Email. The sender shows as "PayPal" <security@paypal.com>.

The email address was probably spoofed. Do not reply to or contact any persons or organizations referenced in this email, or follow any URLs as you may expose yourself to scammers and, at the very least, you will be added to their email address lists for spam purposes.



Security Center Advisory!
We recently noticed one or more attempts to log in to your PayPal account from a foreign IP address and we have reasons to belive that your account was hijacked by a third party without your authorization. If you recently accessed your account while traveling, the unusual log in attempts may have been initiated by you.

If you are the rightful holder of the account you must click the link below and then complete all steps from the following page as we try to verify your identity.

Click here to verify your account



If you choose to ignore our request, you leave us no choise but to temporaly suspend your account.

Thank you for using PayPal! The PayPal Team Please do not reply to this e-mail. Mail sent to this address cannot be answered. For assistance, log in to your PayPal account and choose the "Help" link in the footer of any page.

To receive email notifications in plain text instead of HTML, update your preferences here.
PayPal Email ID PP697 Protect Your Account Info
Make sure you never provide your password to fraudulent persons.

PayPal automatically encrypts your confidential information using the Secure Sockets Layer protocol (SSL) with an encryption key length of 128-bits (the highest level commercially available).

PayPal will never ask you to enter your password in an email.

For more information on protecting yourself from fraud, please review our Security Tips at http://www.paypal.com/securitytips
Protect Your Password You should never give your PayPal password to anyone, including PayPal employees.