People are receiving phishing e-mail messages with requests for payments for a package delivery, with links to a fake postal service website for making the payment.
By 2019, 14.1% of all retail purchases in the world occurred online, and some digital buying statistics show 1.92 billion digital buyers worldwide having received goods through various delivery services. On the average, any given buyer receives 19 deliveries per year.
The 2020 figures are likely to be significantly higher. In this year of self-isolation, it’s no longer uncommon for consumers to receive several deliveries in a single day, or to have a hard time keeping track of which parcels are at what stage of delivery.
Scammers are taking advantage of the situation to solicit random people with e-mail messages asking them to pay a small extra amount, typically just a few bucks, to complete a delivery. The message makes it impossible to identify the parcel; the scammers are clearly counting on people to be overwhelmed or absent-minded, in a rush or simply curious. The recipient is pointed toward a fake postal service website where they can make the payment.
The scam begins with an e-mail notification that appears to come from a well-known delivery service. The messages are sent out in various languages, and the names of the postal services with which the messages purportedly originated vary according to region. The imitations aren’t perfect: Among their other red flags, all of the phishing samples we reviewed were sent from random addresses unrelated to any of the official postal service e-mail addresses.
According to the notification, an order could not be delivered because of an incorrect address, extra charges for unforeseen expenses, or some other vaguely plausible reason.
The recipient is then asked to pay a small amount (not exceeding €3), supposedly to ensure delivery. The senders provide a link to what looks like a delivery service website but is actually a phishing page.
Users who fall for the trick click the link, go directly to the payment page, enter personal information and bank card details as requested, and finally provide a verification code from a text message.
Protecting your funds from scammers is absolutely within your reach. Follow these few basic rules of digital hygiene to keep your money for yourself: