so, uh... anyone have any experience with identity theft?

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oh dear.

lauren, Tuesday, 27 February 2007 18:19 (eighteen years ago)

Thankfully nothing too terrible - just a couple of utilities opened in my name (no idea how, but whoever the person is had a misspelling of my name, but my correct social) and mostly all I've had to do, beyond sending statements to the police and various utility companies, is remember to put a fraud alert on my credit report every three months (if you notify one company, they'll notify the other two.) Good luck.

luna, Tuesday, 27 February 2007 18:26 (eighteen years ago)

thanks. this seems much more severe, unfortunately. i'd like to contact the police right away, but i assume that i need more info to give them than what i currently have. i'm going to speak to a counselor later, who'll hopefully be of some help.

lauren, Tuesday, 27 February 2007 18:30 (eighteen years ago)

oh no!!

s1ocki, Tuesday, 27 February 2007 18:52 (eighteen years ago)

Put a fraud alert on your credit profile ASAP. It's free, and contacting one of the three major companies will suffice since they send it on to the other two. That should stop anyone from opening new accounts...

mh, Tuesday, 27 February 2007 18:52 (eighteen years ago)

Are you in the US?

http://www.ftc.gov/bcp/edu/microsites/idtheft/

http://www.usdoj.gov/criminal/fraud/idtheft.html

daria-g, Tuesday, 27 February 2007 19:03 (eighteen years ago)

I opened a new bank account a couple of weeks ago. Two days later my card arrived. Three days later a card arrived for a BD Arnott. Suss. Phoned the bank, they won't tell me what's going on, but asked I destroy the card. Ho hum, here take all my money, thanks.

.stet., Tuesday, 27 February 2007 19:10 (eighteen years ago)

http://www.oag.state.ny.us/consumer/tips/id_theft_victim.html

gabbneb, Tuesday, 27 February 2007 19:11 (eighteen years ago)

I had two mobile phones I didn't order arrive in the post from Carphone Warehouse one day. I rang them up and they'd been ordered by someone with my card details who was obviously an idiot who didn't realise they'd be sent to the cardholder's address. They'd also used bought some mobile phone top up and something from Amazon. My bank sent me a new card within the week and reimbursed the money. I'm not sure if that counds as ID theft.

Alba, Tuesday, 27 February 2007 19:14 (eighteen years ago)

these fucks hacked my paypal account one and bought some fuckin hush puppies in iowa!!!

chaki, Tuesday, 27 February 2007 19:20 (eighteen years ago)

oh my bad.

Ms Misery, Tuesday, 27 February 2007 19:23 (eighteen years ago)

last week, somebody used my bank card to spend $1100 at an el paso travel agency, but my bank was very responsive, and took the txns off my account the next day...

69, Tuesday, 27 February 2007 19:25 (eighteen years ago)

these fucks hacked my paypal account one and bought some fuckin hush puppies in iowa!!!


the shoes? or the fried food?

lauren, Tuesday, 27 February 2007 19:32 (eighteen years ago)

but, anyway, still trying to figure out what's going on and the extent of it. not good, at any rate. i've had a couple of instances in the past where a card was cloned and that was really no problem to sort out, but this appears to be much larger in scale - loans, etc.

lauren, Tuesday, 27 February 2007 19:34 (eighteen years ago)

shoes!

chaki, Tuesday, 27 February 2007 19:34 (eighteen years ago)

that sucks Lauren. very scary. I hope you can get it all taken care of.

Ms Misery, Tuesday, 27 February 2007 19:35 (eighteen years ago)

yeah, i figured it was the shoes. but for about three confused seconds i had visions of a gang of thieves gorging themselves at arthur treachers.

lauren, Tuesday, 27 February 2007 19:36 (eighteen years ago)

Yes. Someone once used my name and ss# to set up an account with the gas company here. Fortuantely they paid their bills. (I found out about it during a hearing over money I owed the PGW for an account I had put in my name, which had been left unpaid by my former friend after I moved out--a separate issue.)

I am an idiot for not getting a copy of my credit record and seeing what other weird stuff might show up on it.

I never actually tried to track these people down, but I didn't find out until several years after the identity theft took place.

Rockist Scientist, Tuesday, 27 February 2007 20:05 (eighteen years ago)

1. call police
2. call credit bureau
3. call lawyer
4. take a warm bath

lfam, Tuesday, 27 February 2007 20:55 (eighteen years ago)

5. bourbon

lauren, Tuesday, 27 February 2007 21:01 (eighteen years ago)

My cell phone was cloned a couple years ago--without even needing to get at the physical phone. The cloners collected the info necessary to clone the phone by monitoring my signal with a scanner-like device, or so Sprint told me. Sprint actually detected it before I was even aware of it because $450 of calls to the Dominican Republic showed up on my phone in like 1 week. They told me just to pay the regular amount for my next bill even though when it showed up it was like $900. Ended up costing me $0; I did have to reprogram my phone though which Sprint walked me through.

Bnad, Tuesday, 27 February 2007 21:15 (eighteen years ago)

that happened to me about 7 times on sprint, their network is fantastically insecure for scanners and i ended up switching about 2 years ago after getting my phone completely shut off multiple times.

the schef (adam schefter ha ha), Tuesday, 27 February 2007 21:17 (eighteen years ago)

everyone get your free credit report, like now.

mr teeny's dad ran up 30K in cc debt in his name, it has destroyed his credit but he doesn't really want to send his dad to jail over it either. It's getting taken care of but it's a huge cloud hanging over us in the meantime.

in summary, get your free credit report now.

teeny, Tuesday, 27 February 2007 21:38 (eighteen years ago)

Oh teeny thats horrible! :(

Trayce, Tuesday, 27 February 2007 21:50 (eighteen years ago)

capital one called me the other night to notify me of $8000 of charges to my card to places like some Bowling Alley supply factory and some wildlife thing. Luckily they caught it and cancelled the account immediately. A few years ago someone stole our checks, atm cards, and pin numbers from our mail box and it was months and months of headache, during which they actually caught the people doing it but didn't bother to arrest them because, quote, "Oakland PD is too strapped right now and the only person doing fraud is also working homicide". In no cases did our socials get used though, I can imagine that sucks far worse.

akm, Tuesday, 27 February 2007 22:35 (eighteen years ago)

Yikes Teeny! :-(

And yikes Lauren as well. My sis got hit with this years back, someone tried to buy a car in her name. It really was obnoxious, and the effects lasted years.

Ned Raggett, Tuesday, 27 February 2007 22:44 (eighteen years ago)

It seems to be something particularly rampant in the US? Is that just by sheer dint of population perhaps, or are ID obtainment rules easier over there?

Here its sometimes impossible to even get a video store card without handing over yr passport, drivers licence, fingerprints and a pint of wee.

Trayce, Tuesday, 27 February 2007 23:25 (eighteen years ago)

It's for things like this that I keep two separate credit card/bank accounts. One bank account is for PayPal, auctions, restaurants, online ordering, etc. and the credit card only has a $300 limit on it. The other account and card is my private one - that's what I use for paying the bills, payroll deposits, etc.

Elvis Telecom, Wednesday, 28 February 2007 00:33 (eighteen years ago)

Thats a really good idea actually.

Trayce, Wednesday, 28 February 2007 00:47 (eighteen years ago)

pint of wee... jeez trayce what sorta vids are you renting??

haitch, Wednesday, 28 February 2007 00:59 (eighteen years ago)

Wiggy Woo, Wednesday, 28 February 2007 01:09 (eighteen years ago)

huh? don't know what happened there - told me I had to log in (again) then posted empty window.
*glitch*
anyway subject at hand:
yes it's rampent in the US - 60 minutes (a news show on telly) did a piece not too long ago about CC fraud and how it's such a problem - one of the things that makes it such, is that people who are in prison (yes sincerely) are often on the other end of the phone or computer you're making a legit order upon! Then the prison gang easily has your info and passes it to someone outside who makes a fake ID and credit card from stolen CC templates- complete with hologram.

In addition to the things suggested above, call your credit card company and add a "password" (mom's maiden name is likely already compromised)

Wiggy Woo, Wednesday, 28 February 2007 01:16 (eighteen years ago)

sorry to hear this lauren. this happened to my sister 6 years ago and it still crops up sometimes when tries to move apartments or open up new cards.

sanskrit, Wednesday, 28 February 2007 02:53 (eighteen years ago)

one year passes...

some stranger really likes merchandise from FOOTLOCKER and TOYSRUS

iiiijjjj, Monday, 23 June 2008 15:55 (seventeen years ago)

did lauren ever get this sorted out?

akm, Monday, 23 June 2008 16:56 (seventeen years ago)

an ilxor hacked my login once. the mods acted with alacrity.

banriquit, Monday, 23 June 2008 16:58 (seventeen years ago)

Did your identity get stolen, iiiijjjj?

Pleasant Plains, Monday, 23 June 2008 16:58 (seventeen years ago)

Would it be in breach of the new rules to cut and paste the second post on this thread?

Noodle Vague, Monday, 23 June 2008 16:59 (seventeen years ago)

I sometimes impersonate Fidel Castro at birthday parties when the clown cancels at the last minute.

Aimless, Monday, 23 June 2008 17:00 (seventeen years ago)

Would it be in breach of the new rules to cut and paste the second post on this thread?

-- Noodle Vague, Monday, June 23, 2008 12:59 PM (1 minute ago) Bookmark Link

i was think the same thing

carne asada, Monday, 23 June 2008 17:01 (seventeen years ago)

Thankfully nothing too terrible - just a couple of utilities opened in my name (no idea how, but whoever the person is had a misspelling of my name, but my correct social) and mostly all I've had to do, beyond sending statements to the police and various utility companies, is remember to put a fraud alert on my credit report every three months (if you notify one company, they'll notify the other two.) Good luck.

-- luna, Tuesday, February 27, 2007 6:26 PM (1 year ago) Bookmark Link

...

s1ocki, Monday, 23 June 2008 17:02 (seventeen years ago)

^test case

The stickman from the hilarious "xkcd" comics, Monday, 23 June 2008 17:03 (seventeen years ago)

hahaha sorry. could not resist.

s1ocki, Monday, 23 June 2008 17:04 (seventeen years ago)

CAREFUL S1OCKI IT COULD BE A TRAP</Homerwhisper>

Noodle Vague, Monday, 23 June 2008 17:05 (seventeen years ago)

i got things mostly sorted out, in the end. mostly.

lauren, Monday, 23 June 2008 17:07 (seventeen years ago)

board lawyers mount up

banriquit, Monday, 23 June 2008 17:07 (seventeen years ago)

well yesterday, a few hours after I ordered a pizza from Papa Johns (something I never do, but I kept thinking about that garlic sauce after I posted about it last week) and paid with my debit card over the phone, I checked my statement online and there was a $496 transaction at FOOTLOCKER.COM posted that same day. I thought "that's weird, the only time I used my debit card all weekend was on that pizza" and then it occurred to me that the guy who took my order asked for the three-digit security code on the back of the card. I hadn't eaten all day, so I guess my low blood sugar caused me to forgo a second thought about how unusual is it to ask for that. When wife returned home with the car later I had been stewing with hatred for Ben (guy who took my order, name was on the box) and decided it could only be a good idea to drive to the Papa John's and give this clown a piece of my mind. I sorta lost it on the dude, making all his co-workers stop what they were doing and watch this psycho accost poor Ben. Ben got real red in the face and couldn't even look at me as he defended his honor, "I've been asking for that security code for four years now," all the while I'm mad dogging him, visibly angered, treating him like a thief, casting dispersions all stern-like. I get him to give me the name of the day manager or whatever and say I'm gonna talk to the guy tomorrow. I get home all proud of myself for being a Kurt Russell or something and first thing wife says is "hey I called the bank, the charges were from my card, I'm sorry!" I call Ben back and apologize like the complete wiener I am.

anyways then this morning wife checks her other credit card and it had been maxed out with an order from TOYS-R-US. When she calls the bank/store they say they used our phone number, so who knows. She canceled the card and ordered a credit report monitoring thing. Ben will no doubt be slashing my tires some night this week.

iiiijjjj, Monday, 23 June 2008 17:34 (seventeen years ago)

http://z.about.com/d/lost/1/0/d/U/-/-/Ben.jpg

s1ocki, Monday, 23 June 2008 17:35 (seventeen years ago)

Debit cards are evil. You can't really contest any charge on a debit card, whereas you have a whole month with a credit card. Someone stole my CC# to make long distance calls about 15 years ago, and the company reversed the charges, no problem. With a debit card it's already outta yr bank acct.

The only thing I use my debit card for is withdrawing cash from ATMs.

libcrypt, Monday, 23 June 2008 17:42 (seventeen years ago)

if you have a debit card that has a MC or visa logo on it and run it as credit, you get their protection, as far as I know. but you'll notice that most of the time if you use this card at a store and don't expliticly state you're running it through as credit, it defaults as debit; this is cheaper for the merchant, I believe.

akm, Monday, 23 June 2008 17:50 (seventeen years ago)

You can't really contest any charge on a debit card

You can with Bank of America (it's a Visa/debit) - not identity theft, but I stupidly used mine for an on-line purchase. The company charged $2,500 instead of $25. BofA immediately refunded the charge when I reported it and managed the entire investigation. But yeah, I don't use it for anything on-line anymore.

I've had CC# stolen, but the worst thing was self-inflicted (well, husband-inflicted really). When I left my job in January, I boxed up everything from my desk into a single lidded banker's box, including an envelope (boldly marked PERSONAL INFO) of all the stuff I wanted to shred - copies of my passport, SS card, drivers license, voided check, etc. One day, right before we had our first cocktail party at our new place, Mr. Jaq hauled a huge load of junk in lidded banker boxes to Goodwill. Except he gave them everything, including my office box which had still been in the trunk. I had massive panic for a week. Fortunately, nothing came of it.

Jaq, Monday, 23 June 2008 17:55 (seventeen years ago)

Someone stole my debit card # and bought like $600 worth of gas and crap from walmart within a few hours. Luckily Wells Fargo has fraud protection.

homosexual II, Monday, 23 June 2008 17:58 (seventeen years ago)

^^ yep, this. B of A occasionally proves themselves to be not entirely useless. I would say that I should have learned my lesson last summer when a gas station attendant in Shawnee, Oklahoma charged me $100 for a tank of gas and attempted to charge a few other things, but what is that lesson supposed to be, never use a debit card for anything other than withdrawals?

iiiijjjj, Monday, 23 June 2008 18:00 (seventeen years ago)

er that carot should be pointing at Jaq's post

iiiijjjj, Monday, 23 June 2008 18:01 (seventeen years ago)

nothing personal homosexual II

iiiijjjj, Monday, 23 June 2008 18:01 (seventeen years ago)

last year, just after i quit my job, i got a call from chase about some "suspicious transactions" with my debit card #. the tip off was me using it to buy a pack of smokes in chicago followed by someone in london emptying out my account 90 minutes later. i eventually got the $$$ back but goddamn they made me jump through hoops to get it.

chicago kevin, Monday, 23 June 2008 18:03 (seventeen years ago)

I sit corrected. In any case, this is interesting on the CVV:

The Card Security Code (CSC), sometimes called Card Verification Value or Code (CVV or CVC), is a security feature for credit or debit card transactions, giving increased protection against credit card fraud.
There are actually several security codes:
The first code, called CVC1 or CVV1, is encoded on the magnetic stripe of the card and used for transactions in person.
The second code, and the most cited, is CVV2 or CVC2. This CSC (also known as a CCID or Credit Card ID) is often asked for by merchants for them to secure "card not present" transactions occurring over the Internet, by mail, fax or over the phone. In many countries in Western Europe, due to increased attempts at card fraud, it is now mandatory to provide this code when the cardholder is not present in person.
Contactless Card and Chip cards may supply their own codes generated electronically, such as iCVV or Dynamic CVV.

libcrypt, Monday, 23 June 2008 18:05 (seventeen years ago)

what is that lesson supposed to be

I think the main lesson is to check the transactions on your accounts (debit and credit) frequently and jump on it right away when something is amiss.

Jaq, Monday, 23 June 2008 18:07 (seventeen years ago)

I think that the lesson is also that charges on a debit card (using the debit feature, at least) are more difficult to contest than credit card transactions.

libcrypt, Monday, 23 June 2008 18:08 (seventeen years ago)

i never use my debit card to debit my account unless i'm getting cash back. but that's a rarity too.

chicago kevin, Monday, 23 June 2008 18:10 (seventeen years ago)

Had a couple of problems in the past. Got a phone call from my credit card company asking if I'd spent £200 on some gambling site. Fortunately got flagged up instantly, card was cancelled and no money lost. Never found out who it was, but most likely culprit was a dodgy waiter at a restaurant, skimming the card.

Earlier this year got an email from paypal saying that I'd added a new bank account, just as I was about to log on, got another email saying that all the money in my account was withdrawn to it. Logged in instantly, cancelled the transaction and new account and changed password. Reported it to the police who were worse than useless. Someone had been outside our house using a laptop a few days earlier and we'd reported them to the police, who had moved them on. I mentioned this to the duty office and she said 'what does that have to do with computer fraud', tried explaining but she couldn't see the connection. Paypal seemed even less interested despite the fact that they had all the bank details of the new account. Guess I've just been lucky.

Billy Dods, Monday, 23 June 2008 18:54 (seventeen years ago)

iiiijjjj, from the dude's reaction it does sound like something fishy went down, but you should know that every time I've ever ordered from them (lived in kind of a psuedo-frat for a summer, so a lot) they've asked for that code. So, it's probably best not to use that as Exhibit A.

en i see kay, Monday, 23 June 2008 19:04 (seventeen years ago)

In my day, you could just steal someone's wallet and the most you'd lose was your money. Where did all this hype about identity theft come from? Sure wasn't from that John Cusack movie.

VeronaInTheClub, Monday, 23 June 2008 22:24 (seventeen years ago)

nine months pass...

Funny story: my application for tenancy at my dope new place on the South side was just rejected. Since the office was closed over the holiday weekend I called this morning to find out why I'd been rejected assuming it was some paperwork slip-up. I've never had any trouble anywhere.

"Well I gotta tell you there were some things that came up on the criminal background check that we just couldn't ignore. We're not comfortable renting to someone with three charges for possession of a controlled substance, for example."

"....what?"

BIG HOOS aka the steendriver, Monday, 13 April 2009 16:40 (sixteen years ago)

uhh.....

call all destroyer, Monday, 13 April 2009 16:41 (sixteen years ago)

Whoah okay WHAT?? I feel your pain re rejected applications, we've had three places turn us down in 2009. Shit is seriously depressing.

Plus that is some CRAZY news to be getting from your mgmt company. What can you do about it?

guys i need to eliminate this business associate and im really nervous (Laurel), Monday, 13 April 2009 16:42 (sixteen years ago)

They're re-running the background check with a different company to see if it was a mistake, and I'm heading down to the Austin PD to run a check on myself to see if I get the same results. Honestly if this isn't a mistake and is actually happening I have no idea what to do.

BIG HOOS aka the steendriver, Monday, 13 April 2009 16:43 (sixteen years ago)

It must have been a fairly recent thing because I've passed criminal background checks everywhere else I've ever applied to live/work in the last 5 years, right?

BIG HOOS aka the steendriver, Monday, 13 April 2009 16:44 (sixteen years ago)

gotta be a mistake, hoos

call all destroyer, Monday, 13 April 2009 16:45 (sixteen years ago)

This thread belongs in the FIRST RESPONSE hall of fame

•--• --- --- •--• (Pleasant Plains), Monday, 13 April 2009 16:50 (sixteen years ago)

FIRST RESPONSE hall of fame

velko, Monday, 13 April 2009 16:54 (sixteen years ago)

I feel velkocated now.

•--• --- --- •--• (Pleasant Plains), Monday, 13 April 2009 17:00 (sixteen years ago)

Yeah I considered reviving another identity theft thread when I saw this but

BIG HOOS aka the steendriver, Monday, 13 April 2009 17:01 (sixteen years ago)

real luna RIP

brocktune (jeff), Monday, 13 April 2009 17:02 (sixteen years ago)

two years pass...

six grand in charges on a sears credit card in my name in virginia
apparently they have my social and "pertinent personal info necessary to obtain a card".
Awesome. They cancelled the card and put a flag on my account but this has been a pain in the ass all night and will likely require action over the next week.
/first world problems.

walking liquidity crisis (forksclovetofu), Wednesday, 4 January 2012 05:12 (fourteen years ago)

What ever happened with Hoos and the criminal b/g check thing? I NEED CLOSURE ON ANECDOTE

Trayce, Wednesday, 4 January 2012 05:31 (fourteen years ago)

wait, a criminal background check can reveal exactly what crime/s someone was convicted of, not just that they have a criminal history?? that seems really wack that a rental agency can access that kind of specific info.

just1n3, Wednesday, 4 January 2012 06:26 (fourteen years ago)

and sympathies to you, forks. we went through this pretty recently, such a nightmare to deal with.

just1n3, Wednesday, 4 January 2012 06:27 (fourteen years ago)

I worked at a well known natural Mexican food restaurant in Austin,TX for all of two weeks to get some Christmas cash. Two or three years later I received a letter from the IRS demanding I pay them $19K in taxes. I had been paying my taxes but they showed me working for a construction company in Dallas and at the restaurant in Austin.

I had my suspicions and got a friend to phone the restaurant and ask the owners if they knew how to get a social security number. They then told him to call them from a public phone and they would tell him. UGH! The place was next to a bus station that was going back and forth to Brownsville.

So I called Social Security Administration and IRS explained things, had proof that I was working 40 hours for the university for several years straight. Then I stood in several long lines and gathered lots of documents and still have a folder one inch thick. Turns out my social security number was used by two undocumented workers, both males. When I applied for that waitress job they copied my social security card and drivers license...there you go.

For years I was paranoid. It was a nightmare.

*tera, Wednesday, 4 January 2012 07:16 (fourteen years ago)

Holy shit 19k in taxes! What a nightmare!

Trayce, Wednesday, 4 January 2012 07:21 (fourteen years ago)

It seems like knowing one's ssn is all you need in the US to nick someone's ID... surely that cant be all it is? That is frightening.

Trayce, Wednesday, 4 January 2012 07:22 (fourteen years ago)

In the UK I got sent someone else's P45 (i.e. all SSN/tax/job details); on a separate occasion got asked by the tax office about my work abroad (had never done so) and on yet another occasion they asked for a P45 from a job I never had. I quizzed them a lot about this last one because I wanted to know if someone had been thefting my identity but they didn't seem that bothered.

kinder, Wednesday, 4 January 2012 08:19 (fourteen years ago)

I've had my Paypal account hacked before they were caught like a day later. They seem to have gone and bought a load of DVD box sets off ebay.

get ready for the banter (NotEnough), Wednesday, 4 January 2012 08:50 (fourteen years ago)

My ss# was already screwed up. My mother and I have the same name, (ugh!) so they have me working one year before I was born then again at six years old for a year. My birthday is correct so you would think they would spot an error? Nooooooo every year I phone in and explain, receive a form and send in proof and they still screw it up. That is why I hold on to all the documentation of the ID theft. Afraid that one day they will try and give me a hard time and claim I was working 120 hours a week in two different cities. I benefits me but still....

*tera, Wednesday, 4 January 2012 16:53 (fourteen years ago)

four grand more at a best buy.
ten grand total. Filed a police report. Everyone is hella blase about this.

walking liquidity crisis (forksclovetofu), Thursday, 5 January 2012 19:17 (fourteen years ago)

Just happened! Only $60, but ughhh....

gnome rocognise gnome (remy bean), Thursday, 5 January 2012 19:20 (fourteen years ago)

one year passes...

So, I don't think this is attempted identity theft, but I'd appreciate any guesses as to what the hell is going on, other than an attempt to piss me off.

Twice within the past year, the most recent being this week, someone has used my name, my phone number and/or my email address to request information online. It's all things that would require no more data than that -- car insurance quotes, requesting info on enrolling in a school, a job recruitment site, a maid service. Whoever is doing this has no access to my email, but they're using my email and name, so I end up getting a bunch of unsolicited garbage saying I signed up for things. I've also received a handful of phone calls following up on these requests I didn't make.

The only other clue is that there was an address on one of the accounts, but it was for an apartment I haven't lived at in five years. I have no idea why someone who didn't know me would do this, but I really have no idea why anyone I've known would do it, either.

I could change my phone number and email address, but I'd rather not. Hopefully whatever asshole is doing this will just stop?

Can anyone think of a way this would actually fuck w/my identity?

mh, Friday, 27 December 2013 22:03 (twelve years ago)

eleven years pass...

So yesterday I got four emails in a clump from a company called BitHarvest, subject "BitHarvest KYC Approved” — KYC = "know yr customer" or "know yr client"

They didn’t come to my usual email, they came to one I’d forgotten I even still used, which I’d opened to run a joke tumblr account back in the tumblr heyday — and now for some long-forgotten reason still used for my LRB subs account, but for nothing else.

Anyway, the four emails are identical except for the “document type” line, which is different in each case (see below).

I suspect this is simply phishing! I did not click on supp✧✧✧@bitharv✧✧✧.i✧ and have no holdings in bitcoin, or plans to develop same. My question is — is this something I should be further concerned about or can I just delete them all? None of it seems traceable to me. I will switch emails for the LRB sub (the abandoned tumblr can look after itself, since I don’t recall its actual name lol). I guess my actual question is: did any ilxors just ignore something like this, only for something bad to follow?

Dear [redacted email],

We are pleased to inform you that your document verification has been approved.

Account Details :

Full name: [derived from email, bears no similarity to my actual name]

Username: [redacted name, not mine, derived from email]

Created at: 2025-01-09 21:45:46

Document Type:

Selfie (per email 1)

Identity Card Front (per email 2)

Identity Card Back (per email 3)

Utility Bill (per email 4)

Status: Approve

For any questions or support, feel free to contact us at supp✧✧✧@bitharv✧✧✧.i✧
Best regards,
BitHarvest

mark s, Friday, 10 January 2025 12:42 (one year ago)

That looks like phishing to me.

il lavoro mi rovina la giornata (PBKR), Friday, 10 January 2025 12:58 (one year ago)

No cause for concern. I would ignore the emails.

xyzzzz__, Friday, 10 January 2025 13:17 (one year ago)

I got hacked this past Summer via an old iphone I lost in a Jersey City cab about 7(!) years ago. Somehow the thing was still connected to me. Horror.

They got into my Paypal, used everything I had in there and opened some credit accounts. Stole a longtime email as well ( which happens to be the one I’m signed onto iLX with. How do I change this?!?) and took over two Instagram accounts.
Well, it was hell trying to prove to my US bank that I wasn’t the one who opened and used the Paypal cards and that I had been hacked. Aforementioned email account and IG accounts gone forever - forget about reaching a human to help recover just about anything email or social media related. Had to rush to change all kinds of account info going back almost 20(!) years.

Really awful experience that cost me over €200 in calling overseas “ Help Centers”, etc.

completely suited to the horny decadence (Capitaine Jay Vee), Friday, 10 January 2025 15:40 (one year ago)

Not a criticism of what you did or didn’t do seven years ago, but can’t you brick an iPhone remotely?

The Whimsical Muse (Boring, Maryland), Friday, 10 January 2025 15:54 (one year ago)

And of course sorry to hear that happened to you, especially when you are abroad.

The Whimsical Muse (Boring, Maryland), Friday, 10 January 2025 15:55 (one year ago)

xpost I’m a dope about many things and not doing precisely that was pretty stupid.

completely suited to the horny decadence (Capitaine Jay Vee), Friday, 10 January 2025 15:57 (one year ago)

PS How *do* I update my email address here on ILX if the current one I’m logged in with now belongs to some thief?

completely suited to the horny decadence (Capitaine Jay Vee), Friday, 10 January 2025 15:59 (one year ago)

I believe the answer is that it's impossible, you could make a new ILX account though...

The Yellow Kid, Friday, 10 January 2025 16:07 (one year ago)

mark, just ignore and delete or flag it as spam. it's possible they didn't even get that email address from as list and just generated possible addresses and sent junk to all of them

CJV, sorry that happened. What a completely stressful situation

ɥɯ ︵ (°□°) (mh), Friday, 10 January 2025 17:15 (one year ago)

👍🏽

(i too think it was likely machine-generated, what gave me pause was the relative attention to detail of the four seperate emails for four separate validating documents (also not exactly hard to generate)

(sorry JV that clearly sucks)

mark s, Friday, 10 January 2025 18:24 (one year ago)

I got an email yesterday and today about a Bitcoin putchase on my PayPal account (asking for an e-signature to verify)...I just trashed it. If I ever get something like that, I do do a quick online check of my bank account, but that's it.

clemenza, Friday, 10 January 2025 18:28 (one year ago)

PS How *do* I update my email address here on ILX if the current one I’m logged in with now belongs to some thief?

― completely suited to the horny decadence (Capitaine Jay Vee), Friday, 10 January 2025 15:59 (two hours ago) bookmarkflaglink

I believe the answer is that it's impossible, you could make a new ILX account though...

― The Yellow Kid, Friday, 10 January 2025 16:07 (two hours ago) bookmarkflaglink

Yeah, sorry. A new account is the only way.

emil.y, Friday, 10 January 2025 18:34 (one year ago)


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