Earlier this year there was a version of this scam that came from AusPost’s actual official number
Issy
AusPost’s warning
The gist of this kind of AusPost scam is that you receive a text from a random number and it says that your package is waiting for collection or prompts you to arrange redelivery. Sometimes it asks for a very small fee to be paid.
Scammers hope that you will click on the link and enter your details, which they then use for their nefarious plots.
, which was even more fucked up and hard to discern as a fake.
The other type of AusPost scam to look out for comes via email. I was first alerted to it by my colleague who said she felt silly for almost falling for it. But these email ones are quite convincing. Clearly graphic design is the scammers’ passion.
Other types of email scams clearly resemble actual AusPost email formats as well.
Issy explained that she actually did have some packages waiting at the post office at the time, so immediately thought the message was related. She got suspicious when she realised the email addressed her by her surname and asked her to pay money.
Per , it will never:
So let that be the red flag every time you get an “AusPost” message. Stay safe out there people, and may all your Christmas packages arrive on time and unscathed.
- Call, text or email you asking for personal or financial information including password, credit card details or account information
- Call, text or email you to request payment
- Ask you to click on an email link to print off a label to redeem your package
The post Protect Yr Packages: AusPost Has Issued Warnings For Two Separate Scams Running Right Now appeared first on PEDESTRIAN.TV .