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fishing mail

Gentile Cliente,
il tuo ID Apple è stato utilizzato per accedere a iCloud da un browser web.
Data e ora: 06 marzo 2018, 12:45 PDT
Indirizio IP , Luogo: 61.155.164.110, China - Shanghai
Se recententemente hai eseguito l'accesso a iCloud, puoi ignorare questa email.
Se recententemente non hai eseguito l'accesso a iCloud e ritieni che qualcun altro possa aver eseguito l'accesso al tuo account, clicca sul link seguente per riavviare il informazioni Il mio ID Apple.

<Link edited by Host as following the procedures at the site may lead to damage to the user’s device>

Posted on Mar 6, 2018 6:46 AM

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Question marked as Best reply

Posted on Mar 6, 2018 7:25 AM

Identifying legitimate emails from the iTunes Store - http://support.apple.com/HT201679 - lacking in specifics, the next link is better:


Avoid phishing emails, fake 'virus' alerts, phony support calls, and other scams - https://support.apple.com/HT204759


Forward attempts as an attachment to: reportphishing@apple.com


https://blog.malwarebytes.com/cybercrime/2018/02/panic-attack-apple-scams-apply- pressure/


- Apple e-mails address you by your real name, not something like "Dear Customer" , "Dear Client" or an e-mail address.

- Apple e-mails originate from @apple.com or @itunes.com but I think it is possible to spoof a sender address

- Mouse over links to see if they direct to real Apple web sites. Do not click on them as this just tells the spammer they have a working e-mail address in their database.

- Phishing emails often threaten you to scare you into doing something without thinking.

2 replies
Question marked as Best reply

Mar 6, 2018 7:25 AM in response to cmaffez

Identifying legitimate emails from the iTunes Store - http://support.apple.com/HT201679 - lacking in specifics, the next link is better:


Avoid phishing emails, fake 'virus' alerts, phony support calls, and other scams - https://support.apple.com/HT204759


Forward attempts as an attachment to: reportphishing@apple.com


https://blog.malwarebytes.com/cybercrime/2018/02/panic-attack-apple-scams-apply- pressure/


- Apple e-mails address you by your real name, not something like "Dear Customer" , "Dear Client" or an e-mail address.

- Apple e-mails originate from @apple.com or @itunes.com but I think it is possible to spoof a sender address

- Mouse over links to see if they direct to real Apple web sites. Do not click on them as this just tells the spammer they have a working e-mail address in their database.

- Phishing emails often threaten you to scare you into doing something without thinking.

fishing mail

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