on 29-09-2015 08:36
on 29-09-2015 08:36
As of the 27th September, somebody has setup an O2 account giving my name and email address as contact details. On the 28th I've received an email notification of a bill for £37.16.
I cannot access this other account since I don't have the password for it, though I do have the username that came with the "Welcome To O2" email.
No financial crime has yet been commited against me as far as I know. Though I will be keeping an eye on my bank account for bogus transactions. At the moment I can only presume the person who setup the account doesn't have any bank or card details related to me.
Anyone else had any experience of this?
29-09-2015 13:16 - edited 29-09-2015 14:46
29-09-2015 13:16 - edited 29-09-2015 14:46
@gindygoo wrote:
Hmmm... I'll criss my fingers for you. But, as this was a big problem not that long ago I'm super dubious it's not some sort of fraud using your details (just not your bank account) to get an expensive phone.
Just be extra vigilant and also I'd have a look at your credit profile (it won't show up straight away), you can get a free trial with most of them for a month.
Let us know how things pan out!
Mmmmmm...I agree here. if it was me I would be checking and double checking on a daily basis. (Having been victim of fraud on my cards on 3 occasions) I had £1200 spent by someone in Australia and it gave me the fright of my life. Nationwide fraud team were very much on the ball though and they alerted me and put a stop on my cards pretty quickly. Thing is these scammers are getting very very clever at thinking up new ways to rob the innocent...
Veritas Numquam Perit
on 29-09-2015 19:16
on 29-09-2015 19:16
@Cleoriff wrote:
@gindygoo wrote:
Hmmm... I'll criss my fingers for you. But, as this was a big problem not that long ago I'm super dubious it's not some sort of fraud using your details (just not your bank account) to get an expensive phone.
Just be extra vigilant and also I'd have a look at your credit profile (it won't show up straight away), you can get a free trial with most of them for a month.
Let us know how things pan out!Mmmmmm...I agree here. if it was me I would be checking and double checking on a daily basis. (Having been victim of fraud on my cards on 3 occasions) I had £1200 spent by someone in Australia and it gave me the fright of my life. Nationwide fraud team were very much on the ball though and they alerted me and put a stop on my cards pretty quickly. Thing is these scammers are getting very very clever at thinking up new ways to rob the innocent...
Definitely, and I'm thinking back to how cs dealt with a lot of these incidents of fraud. They were blasé at best and dismissive and in denial quite often. It wasn't a great advert for the way O2 were dealing with fraudulent purchases and contracts.
If this was me, I'd be like @Cleoriff and double/triple checking things daily.
In fact, have you actually been put through to the fraud dept by cs? Or has an advisor given you their "opinion"? Maybe I'm being too cynical... But I've also been a victim of this kind of fraud and its a nightmare if not dealt with promptly.