Hi, I found a new phishing email in my junk folder today which I forwarded to phishing@bt.com.
Details as follows (links in my posting are dummies):
From: Mail Support btinternet.com <admin@floridacraftart.org>
Subject: ⚠️WARNING:- You have (12) Messages Pending >> myemailaddress@btinternet.com
Date: 22 November 2021 at 09:05:15 GMT
To: myemailaddress@btinternet.com
Attention btinternet.com
Your account myemailaddress@btinternet.com has (10) incoming messages pending
btinternet.com
Release pending mails
Note: This important message sent to you based on the terms of service agreement btinternet.com. accepted, carried out in purpose to provide a more active platform for your domain service, do not ignore notification to avoid system timeout or service collision, administrator robot may be forced to sign you out of service.
btinternet.com © 2021 webmail security
Just received a call from an Indian caller telling me they were from BT and that they could see that my broadband has gone 'public' and they need to fix it to stop people using it. Smells like a scam but they managed to send me a PIN?
Just feels dodgy but has anyone else had experience of this type of call?
Regards
@synchromeshwrote:Just received a call from an Indian caller telling me they were from BT and that they could see that my broadband has gone 'public' and they need to fix it to stop people using it. Smells like a scam but they managed to send me a PIN?
Just feels dodgy but has anyone else had experience of this type of call?
Regards
If it feels dodgy, sounds dodgy, smells dodgy, bin it.
You could always ask he/she to provide your name and BT account number. If this isn't forthcoming, ask that the weather is like in Bangalore!
By the way, BT no longer have customer services located in India although that isn't to say we have no Indians working over here (and welcome they are too).
Yes, they are able to send the PIN. Basically it means they have gotten hold of your phone number and email address used for your BT account in someway and they are trying to gain entry to your account.
I had this a while back and ended up changing the email address on my BT account to stop it as they just kept trying.
Neither BT or Openreach will ever call you out of the blue telling you that you have a problem with your broadband. If you get such a call it is a scam.
The only time BT will send you a PIN is during a phone call or series of phone calls that you have instigated. This is to verify to BT that they are speaking to the genuine account holder. If you did not call BT or were expecting a return phone call about a specific problem/enquiry that you instigated, it is not a genuine BT call.
@syoung76 wrote:
Yes, they are able to send the PIN. Basically it means they have gotten hold of your phone number and email address used for your BT account in someway and they are trying to gain entry to your account.
I had this a while back and ended up changing the email address on my BT account to stop it as they just kept trying.
Your email address and phone number are undoubtedly all over the Internet unless of course you have never given them out to any online site or high street retail shop that "will send you a receipt" after your purchase.
BT are currently running a scam where they send you a text you do not want with the instruction ' Text STOP to [number}' to stop receiving these texts. When you do text STOP that does not stop the texts and also adds 20 pence to your bill EACH TIME ! This practice by BT is unacceptable, also after 30 minutes searching the BT website, no way is provided to complain to BT about this, except maybe phone them which I assume, given current practices they will charge for.
Stephen I have no idea what the text is or even if it is BT but there is a complaint page which explains the options. There is a free number and an email method (for which you have to be registered). Have you tried that process? https://www.bt.com/help/contact-bt/complaints/make-complaint
@stephenrideI very much doubt this is coming from BT it just looks like it.