Robb Topolski
15 April 2008 @ 08:11 am
Yahoo Messenger Spam  
I woke up this morning to this via Yahoo! Messenger ...
(4/15/2008 2:27:08 AM) lizzybeth22222: I am lizzybeth j john,I was Born and Raised In Arizona In Usa..Loc..300,mission road,sedona..I will Like to Describe Myself....I am 5;7fst,Brown Long hair,hazel eyes...130lbs...I am an Honest and Godfearing lady,Respect,Caring,Faithful,Loving,Sense of Humours...I was Born In Christain Family ...My Family BackGround...Catholic....I am Causain White.....Wht do U Like to do....I Like to cook,Readnovel,Movies,Dance,Music and go to beach with My right man.......I am Single Looking For Long term Relationship to spend the rest of my life with him in Happy home and settle down forever........I will like to know eachother better.....Like to hear from you....Bye..
I get two or three of these a week.  They're real people.  Usually, I politely say "thank you, but I'm not interested," and then I block them. 

I looked up the address, and it is a valid address in Sedona, but I don't think there's a beach nearby.  If she lives with Grandma and Grandpa, though, I think they're my kind of people!

 
 
Current Mood: amused
 
 
Robb Topolski
23 September 2007 @ 08:46 am
Responsible Adults Open the Mail  
Yesterday, I was talking a walk, listening to a podcast of The Clark Howard Show. During the show, he talked to a caller who got a letter from a collection agency. The man was certain that he did not owe the debt, as he is meticulous about his credit.  In the usual boiler-plate text, the letter explained that the man has 30 days to dispute the validity of the debt, after which the collection agency would continue in their attempts to collect it.

Although the call wasn't about the validity of that 30-day dispute window, it was that part that got me to thinking. 

I'm terrible about opening my mail.  It's never anything I want. If I could "unsubscribe" from the U.S. Mail, I would.  I keep my bill payments on auto-pay, and I subscribe to the "average-my-payments" utility plans so I don't usually need to look at bills.  A mere clerical error could cause such a letter, which I would ignore.  It would only be months later that I would be likely to discover the damage, and while I probably could eventually fix it, it would be much more of a hassle. 

A few weeks ago, I gave Lucy and Desi their flea treatment -- it was my last vial of Frontline Plus.  I save about 60% on it by ordering it on eBay, and I buy a year's supply at a time.  I tried to pay for it, and my credit card was declined.  Hmph! I dug out my debit card and paid using it, instead. 

My card should not be declined! I'm not near my maximum, I hardly use the thing.  So, I logged on to the Credit Union's website which also confirmed that I'm not near my maximum and that I hardly use the thing.  However, going back a couple of months, there are two charges that I didn't make.  One says "ORANGE (AE EQ 02) EQUIPMENT" for $445.03 and one says "ORANGE (AE PG 02) PAY AS YOU GO" for $20.23.  There is also an International Transaction Fee for each charge.



I've been sick -- way too sick to travel.  What the hell is Orange?  Turns out that Orange is part of FranceTelecom specializing in mobile phone service.  This apparently was the purchase of some phone equipment and pre-paid service.

On a credit card, you have 60 days to dispute a bogus charge, which I have now done.  What most likely happened was that my Credit Union put a hold on my account when they saw the international charge, suspecting that it was used illegally.  Still, I called the Visa Lost/Stolen Card Toll-Free number, and told them that my credit-card number was out there having a great time without me.

I vow that I will always open my mail every day. In fact, I'll probably move the shredder to a new spot for this daily duty, (next to the toilet).
 
 
Current Mood: calm
 
 
Robb Topolski
26 July 2004 @ 08:03 pm
Phishing Attempt  
Phishing is attempting to steal someone's account information by pretending to be someone that can be trusted.

Check this out:

Return-Path: x-bounce@x.com
Errors-To: x-bounce@x.com
Bounce-To: x-bounce@x.com
Return-Path: <75556x08@derechoshumanos.com>
Delivered-To: x.com-x@mailshell.com
X-Apparently-From: 75556x08@derechoshumanos.com
Received: (qmail 5553 invoked from network); 26 Jul 2004 08:17:52 -0000
Received: from unknown (HELO mailshell.com) (10.1.3.215)
by dev90.mailshell.com with SMTP; 26 Jul 2004 08:17:52 -0000
Received: (qmail 2756 invoked by uid 99); 26 Jul 2004 08:17:50 -0000
Message-ID: <20040726081750.23264.qmail@mailshell.com>
Received: (qmail 12597 invoked from network); 26 Jul 2004 08:17:47 -0000
Received: from unknown (HELO 80.145.153.116) (80.145.153.116)
by mail.mailshell.com with SMTP; 26 Jul 2004 08:17:47 -0000
From: "US Bank" <user-supp@usbank.com>
To: <x@x.com>
Subject: U.S. Bank info. [Mon, 26 Jul 2004 10:15:55 +0100]
Date: Mon, 26 Jul 2004 10:15:55 +0100
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: multipart/related; type="multipart/alternative"; boundary="=_dev90.mailshell.com-5710-1090829883-0001-2"
X-Mailer: QUALCOMM Windows Eudora Pro Version 4.0
X-MimeOLE: Produced By Microsoft MimeOLE V3.00.2500.1106
X-Apparently-To: dev90-x.com-x
X-JUNK1: 17
From: US Bank [mailto:user-supp@usbank.com]
Sent: Monday, July 26, 2004 2:16 AM
To: funchords@singcerely.com
Subject: U.S. Bank info. [Mon, 26 Jul 2004 10:15:55 +0100]

<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.0 Transitional//EN">
<HTML><HEAD>
<META http-equiv=Content-Type content="text/html; charset=us-ascii">
<STYLE></STYLE>
</HEAD>
<BODY bgColor=#FFFFFF>
<DIV><FONT face=Arial size=2>
<A HREF="http://www.usbank.com/cgi_w/cfm/confirmation/account_access/account_confirm.cfm"><map name="FPMap0"><area coords="0, 0, 733, 403" shape="rect" href="206.48.103.101/cfm/index.htm"></map><img SRC="cid:472n590l884e444887946591iv744226@user-supports7@usbank.com" border="0" usemap="#FPMap0"></A>
</FONT>
<FONT COLOR=#FEFEFD>
11b 42t28 9886y 366wb 9039288 48gm2 9485f48 457a323 52 3jK1 22523ur 7k960753 5i15894298 4o1125 58 p67485 439 70 1588D5f946 804 p2798g59 po6 a07u93 168730 33 dnp90030 9k87855m5
61K897P528 632870
528 5311119324 r23j13 18335 751g635 2t2i7382 2209097616 415788827 5t05G24 p244xl1 70094ji 7142 88m 11lK104 3o5d r7G8b08 776 1461W30 641q1K 0043 5K478a6 63509x8646 33723 684 715785 323347 668640509 1r81200111 66962i0580 162 054766 79269 cjm0L
0297 21 47

Sjsbd Asuyrvfjouohj. Mon, 26 Jul 2004 10:15:55 +0100
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