I have received an email from repair.team5@gmail.com and I want to make sure it's legit.
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It's a phishing scam trying to steal your account.
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It's a phishing scam trying to steal your account.
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repair team5@gmail com
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απόκρυψη λεπτομερειών 31 Οκτ (Πριν από6 ημέρες)
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Did you access your account using a different Device ? Yes/No
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repair team5@gmail com
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I have received an email from repair.team5@gmail.com and I want to ...
www.google.com › Help forum › Gmail › Account Access - Cached
18 Aug 2011 – I have received an email from repair.team5@gmail.com and I want to make sure it's legit.-
I have received an email from repair.team5@gmail.com and I want to make sure it's legit. | Report abuse |
The email says my account has been suspended and says that I have to provide info about myself or it will be deactivated. I just want to make sure that it isn't fake - that it's really from Google and that you really need the info for some reason to keep the account activated. Is it true? Is repair.team5@gmail.com really you?
Reply 1 of 1
It's a phishing scam trying to steal your account.
Phishing scams include e-mails that request your login:password information, or links to fake web-sites that ask for your login:password. For web-sites, the printed link may look valid but the actual link could go someplace different.
You can ignore it, use the drop-down menu next to reply to "Report Phishing", or use the following form: http://mail.google.com/ support/bin/request.py? contact_type=abuse_phishing
Note: a simple forum search would have turned up dozens of posts about this same e-mail. Search is your friend.
For more information see:
Messages asking for personal information: http://mail.google.com/ support/bin/answer.py?hl=en& answer=8253
Avoiding Scams: http://mail.google.com/ support/bin/answer.py?hl=en& answer=29380
Reporting suspicious messages: http://mail.google.com/ support/bin/answer.py?hl=en& answer=29381
Phishing scams include e-mails that request your login:password information, or links to fake web-sites that ask for your login:password. For web-sites, the printed link may look valid but the actual link could go someplace different.
You can ignore it, use the drop-down menu next to reply to "Report Phishing", or use the following form: http://mail.google.com/
Note: a simple forum search would have turned up dozens of posts about this same e-mail. Search is your friend.
For more information see:
Messages asking for personal information: http://mail.google.com/
Avoiding Scams: http://mail.google.com/
Reporting suspicious messages: http://mail.google.com/
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