Protect yourself from Spoof (fraudulent emails)
What is a spoof email?
Spoof emails (sometimes called phishing) and web sites associated with them attempt
to steal the identity of members of popular web sites such as
quicksales. The email pretends to be from a well known company.
People who send spoof emails ask recipients to reply or fill in details on a web
site with personal information - such as your credit card number or a username and
password - to commit identity theft.
A common method is to send a spoof (fake) email asking the recipient to click a
link and update or verify their account details.
You can protect yourself from spoof affecting you
Spoof emails and the spoof web sites associated with them use deceptive tactics
to make them appear like they were sent from a popular web site. However, they contain
content that reveals they are in fact fake. You can protect yourself by learning
how to spot the misleading content.
Generic greetings - Many spoof emails will not include the recipients
real name or username, instead they use a generic greeting such as "Dear member".
A false sense of urgency - Many spoof emails try to trick you into
acting quickly by warning that a failure to do so will result in account suspension.
Fake links - DO NOT click on any links contained in a suspicious
email. Make sure you know where the link is going by moving your mouse over the
link first. Links in
quicksales
emails will begin with
http://www.quicksales.com.au
or
https://www.quicksales.com.au. Instead of clicking on a link in an email, open a new browser
window and type
http://www.quicksales.com.au
to go to
quicksales.
Make sure you are on
quicksales' web site - Before signing in to
quicksales
always make sure the web address starts with
https://www.quicksales.com.au/secure, you can see the Secure Padlock on your browser.
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1. Web address
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2. Secure Padlock
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Check to see if the email is in your
quicksales
inbox - Emails sent from the
quicksales
system (with the exception of newsletters and marketing emails) will also be available
in your
quicksales
inbox in 'My
quicksales'. Emails sent from
quicksales
will not ask you for personal information such as your password or credit card information.
Report spoof emails to us
Please contact us if you think you have received a spoof email, we will then email
you with an address you can forward the entire email to.
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