News

Amazon's 220 million Prime members face an unprecedented phishing attack with fake messages surging 50 times normal volume.
Protect yourself from Amazon phishing scams by spotting red flags like suspicious sender addresses and spelling errors while using Amazon's Message Center to verify communications.
Scammers are targeting Amazon Prime users with fake refund messages that look identical to real Amazon communications. Once ...
According to the FTC, recipients receive an "unexpected text that looks like it’s from Amazon," asking them to visit a link ...
Fake product reviews, phishing and "smishing" attempts, whereby criminals send shoppers links used to steal their information, aren't unique to Amazon or Prime Day.
A new phishing scam promises Amazon customers full refunds without returning an order, the FTC says. Here's what to know about it.
Think twice before clicking that email from Amazon. The company has sent out emails to hundreds of millions of customers warning about phishing scams that are tricking people into giving up their ...
The Chartered Trading Standards Institute (CTSI) has urged the public to be wary of scam emails claiming to be linked to Amazon Prime accounts.
But phishing attempts increase amid busy spending seen during significant sales events — from Black Friday to, of course, Prime Day, according to the Better Business Bureau.
The world of e-commerce is fraught with bad guys trying to pull fast ones. Here’s how to spot them before they rip you off.
Thankfully, these emails were benign and just a note about the dangers of phishing and general scams, which is a good occasional warning anyhow.
Microsoft and Amazon.com have filed a joint lawsuit against a Canadian company and several separate lawsuits against companies and individuals accusing them of trying to defraud consumers by ...