Jason Davies
unread,Dec 26, 2024, 5:08:49 PM12/26/24Sign in to reply to author
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Hi Smuggers,
Merry Xmas to you all.
Given we've all been buying things on credit cards (I expect!), I thought I'd share this story as it's a variation on fraud I wasn't familiar with.
Amex (who I recommend for this) flagged on Xmas eve that CDKeys.com had requested a payment via paypal from my account. They declined as I didn't respond (I don't get up at 7.20 on Xmas now my kids are grown) and asked me to ring, and when I did we worked out this was the 3rd one. The first one a couple of weeks ago for 0.79 went through, the second one for 12.99 also went through a few days later. What threw me noticing this was that I had bought something for that amount from Amazon the day before (coincidence) so didn't twig it was a separate transaction.
This is where it got interesting. Though Amex were apparently asked by paypal for CDKeys, there was no history of it in Paypal. So somehow, they were sending a request that claimed to be paypal-authorised, but wasn't from paypal.
The moral of the story is to watch out for discrepancies between paypal and whichever card you have linked to paypal...
[I've changed passwords, email addresses etc, and Amex refunded me but I'm still a bit puzzled about how they got as far as they did, and whether anything of mine was ever hacked. I have no account with CDKeys [game website] and can't find any trace of ever using them].
So keep safe folks. The old advice about checking for statements as crooks start with small amounts then escalate still holds true!
Cheers,
Jason