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Neil McCauley
24-11-2015, 10:57
This morning I received the following. I pass it on fyi and in the hope that fewer people are scammed. That said, I have no idea to what extent audiophile buyers are vulnerable to this although of course such buyers may well purchase non-audiophile electrical good from time to time.

Thank you. HP

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This is a message sent via Action Fraud Alert. This information has been sent on behalf of Action Fraud (National Fraud Intelligence Bureau)

Message sent by
Action Fraud (Action Fraud, Administrator, National)

Fraudsters have set up a high specification website template advertising various electrical goods and domestic appliances. These goods are below market value and do not exist. The fraudsters will request your card details via the website; however the purchaser will then receive an email stating the payment failed and they must pay via bank transfer.

The fraudsters entice the purchaser and reassure them it is a legitimate purchase by using the widely recognised Trusted Shop Trustmark. The fraudsters are using the Trustmark fraudulently and have not been certified by Trusted Shops and therefore the purchaser is not covered by the Trusted Shop money-back guarantee.

Protect yourself:



Check the authenticity of the websites before making any purchases. Conduct a ‘whois’ search on the website which will identify when the website has been created, be wary of newly formed domains. You can conduct this search using the following website - https://who.is/
Carry out online research in relation to the website, company name and the business address provided to identify any poor feedback or possible irregularities.
Check the Trusted Shops Facebook page where warnings about websites using their Trustmark are published. If you are in doubt about the legitimacy of a Trustmark then you can contact Trusted Shops on 0203 364 5906 or by email service@trustedshops.co.uk. They will confirm whether they have certified that website.
Payments made via bank transfer are not protected should you not received the item. Therefore always try to make the payment via PayPal or a credit card where you have some payment cover should you not receive your product.
If the item advertised seems too good to be true, then it probably is.


If you believe that you have been a victim of fraud you can report it online http://www.actionfraud.police.uk/report_fraud or by telephone 0300 123 2040.

anthonyTD
24-11-2015, 11:03
Thanks Howard.:)
Its the ideal time for scammers, plenty of folk looking for a bargain at this time of year.
Also, it would seem that they are getting more sophisticated in the way they use technology, they can even clone the tel/no of reputable companies, so you think they are from the legit companies, they even urge you to ring them back, however, if you do it right away, they put on a fake dial tone,and dont realy hang up, if your not sure if the company is legit, you need to wait at least 10 mins before ringing back.
Hope this helps.
A...

walpurgis
24-11-2015, 11:06
Yes. A good warning.