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I got this same one. Nefarious shit. I called the number and then realized it wasn't a 1-800 number and something smelled fishy.Same scam happens with all kinds of different "FROM" companies. I've seen some very sneaky ones, too where the sender lists an email address that looks legit, only it's in the "name" field and not the email field.
See this screenshot I took here - notice who it's from. I didn't see the actual sending email until I hovered over it.
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805 is a southern California area code in the Santa Barbara/Ventura County area. The 500 prefix is questionable...I got this same one. Nefarious shit. I called the number and then realized it wasn't a 1-800 number and something smelled fishy.
By what method?I learned this one from IT when I was working. Should you accidentally click on a suspicious link, disconnect from the internet before closing the window.
With the way things work now that doesn't seem like that would accomplish much of anything.I learned this one from IT when I was working. Should you accidentally click on a suspicious link, disconnect from the internet before closing the window.
Unplug the power to the router/modem?By what method?
By what method?
If I remember correctly, the rational was that even if you don't click on any links, but just want to close the pop up window from a malicious site, which one might think is a harmless thing to do, could possibly lead to the computer getting infected. So disabling the active internet connection would render any potential malicious link harmless.With the way things work now that doesn't seem like that would accomplish much of anything.
Only thing in there I can maybe make sense of is trying to disable the pop ups that have fake window closing buttons.If I remember correctly, the rational was that even if you don't click on any links, but just want to close the pop up window from a malicious site, which one might think is a harmless thing to do, could possibly lead to the computer getting infected. So disabling the active internet connection would render any potential malicious link harmless.
That's just not really how things work. No need to do that in most cases. Only time that would maybe matter is if you have a server that everyone is running from but even then it likely would stay quarantined.Maybe by disconnecting cables/wifi/power from the network it will prevent others from being infected.
That's just not really how things work. No need to do that in most cases. Only time that would maybe matter is if you have a server that everyone is running from but even then it likely would stay quarantined.
If you don't have a lock on your credit report yet, better do it now. Especially if you have ever been an AT&T customer.
Pretty sure the youngest among us was around for AOL.AOL was pretty big at one time, for those youngsters who never heard of it.