Complaint Review: lala.co.il/FILES2/MITZAD/ - Bank of America - Internet
- lala.co.il/FILES2/MITZAD/ - Bank of America www.lala.co.il/FILES2/MITZAD/ Internet U.S.A.
- Phone:
- Web:
- Category: Con Artists
lala.co.il/FILES2/MITZAD/ - Bank of America sent an E-mail trying to get bank information. Their website is full of wierd text, this needs to be looked at. Internet
*Consumer Comment: No worries
This site sent me an e-mail that looked like a Bank Of America e-mail. They said that my account had been suspended due to attempts to look at it. They wanted me to click on a link and enter my account information. This made my site advisor pop up a critical warning to STOP! My site adviser gave me the website information I provided to you. I copy-pasted the information to my browser and found a weird page with misc. text on it. I did not give them any information. The only sites I gave my account information to were amazon.com and fusioncash.com. These may be the potential sites that caused the breach. My bank information is not on any other sites.
Sarah
Kent, Washington
U.S.A.
This report was posted on Ripoff Report on 07/14/2007 08:13 PM and is a permanent record located here: https://www.ripoffreport.com/reports/lalacoilfiles2mitzad-bank-of-america/internet/lalacoilfiles2mitzad-bank-of-america-sent-an-e-mail-trying-to-get-bank-information-260920. The posting time indicated is Arizona local time. Arizona does not observe daylight savings so the post time may be Mountain or Pacific depending on the time of year. Ripoff Report has an exclusive license to this report. It may not be copied without the written permission of Ripoff Report. READ: Foreign websites steal our content
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#1 Consumer Comment
No worries
AUTHOR: Lar77 - (U.S.A.)
SUBMITTED: Wednesday, July 25, 2007
These are common emails and your information has NOT been compromised, so please don't worry. I have BOA accts and my mother does not. We BOTH received the email. I have verified that it is common. Most likely these theives use BOA simply because they are the largest bank in the US and they are more likely to end up sending emails to actual account holders there than with another bank. They are just randomly sending emails to people whose email addresses they've come upon. As long as you did not enter any information, you're fine.


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