• AFK BRB Chocolate
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    1427 months ago

    Your morning will be going worse if you click that link.

    • @ColdgoronOP
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      607 months ago

      Haven’t clicked any link yet but it could be possible phishing. Maybe log into my legit discover account first.

      • AFK BRB Chocolate
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        7 months ago

        It is for sure phishing. Discover isn’t going to send you an email like that. Even loading the graphics was a bad idea.

        Edit: apparently I stand corrected. I’ve gotten security alerts from my credit card companies before, but never with a link like that, and never saying something like “dark web.” Sorry to hear it

        • @mipadaitu
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          897 months ago

          It’s not “for sure phishing” Discover does send emails like that. They have a service where they scan the internet for your personal information, and they sell you credit monitoring, and other stuff to reduce the impact.

          Here’s a screenshot of part of their website for this monitoring.

          Of course it’s ALWAYS a good idea to go to the website, and never click a link on an email from your financial institution, but I’m like 80% sure that this is a legit email.

          Also, your SSN and other financial details have likely been compromised dozens of times, so just having your SSN floating around out there isn’t surprising. It’s a fault in the system for using an unsecured SSN as an identify instead of what it was initially used for.

          • @[email protected]
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            337 months ago

            It’s a fault in the system for using an unsecured SSN as an identify instead of what it was initially used for.

            It is alao the fault of the government for not putting a halt to and punishing those corporations who decided to hijack SSNs and treat them as some kind of secret code.

            • teft
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              137 months ago

              They’d have to start with the army. We used our social on everything as an identifier while I was in. I’d honestly be more surprised if my SSN wasn’t compromised.

              • @[email protected]
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                87 months ago

                When i was in college in the 90s they used socials when they posted test scores.

                One thing I noticed was that since it was a state college 90% of them started with the same 3 numbers because of how they issued SSNs.

            • @franzfurdinand
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              37 months ago

              I cannot imagine the shit fit that people would throw if we tried to implement a secure national identity number. Even the SSN got a lot of backlash for being “the mark of the beast”, and that was introduced a little under a hundred years ago.

            • @cm0002
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              17 months ago

              It was the government that started that in the first place lmao and then corporations went “Well the US gov can do it, why not us?”

          • @mipadaitu
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            77 months ago

            Oh great, I clicked too many of their links on their website and now I’m getting targeted ads for their “super special identity protection”

          • AFK BRB Chocolate
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            37 months ago

            Okay, I made an edit. Like I said there, the alerts I’ve gotten have never had links for the reasons you mentioned - they say things like “call the number on the back of your card.”

        • @ColdgoronOP
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          7 months ago

          Sadly its legit…

          Edit: It was the at&t data breach

            • @ColdgoronOP
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              37 months ago

              I think I was with their service once a long time ago and I did an application to see if I could get a phone plus service package. This probably got my social in the process for credit score reasons.

            • @[email protected]
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              27 months ago
              1. They’ll give you a $1000 phone under the guarantee of a 2-year contract. That can be considered a type of loan and they can repo the phone if you stop paying.
              2. If you stop paying monthly bills, they can only really force you to pay the balance if they have your SSN and can affect your credit score.

              I’m not endorsing the practice of ruining people’s chances of buying a home over unpaid phone bills, but it’s a pretty good deal from AT&T’s perspective.

          • rhythmisaprancer
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            7 months ago

            Hmm dang I got an email from ATT about this, and the last I had them was for a landline in 2013… Can’t believe they keep data for this long.

            Sorry this happened to you.

        • @XeroxCool
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          397 months ago

          Discover offers monitoring. How are you so sure it’s phishing? An abundance of caution and logging in directly is certainly a safe route to verify, but convincing OP this is phishing and that the graphics are risky is unnecessarily alarming

          • AFK BRB Chocolate
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            17 months ago

            See my edit - apparently I was wrong. My credit card companies never put a link on security alerts, and they’ve said they never will, so that customers know alerts with links are bogus. They always say to call the number on the card or login to your account, without providing a number or link. Discover must work differently.

        • @AlphaAutist
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          197 months ago

          Are you sure? Discover does have free identity monitoring and I get emails every month saying whether they found anything or not. I have never gotten an email saying they found my ssn though so can’t say for sure if this is legit. Either way I would still check through the app or their website without opening the link.

          • AFK BRB Chocolate
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            27 months ago

            I made an edit - weird that their alert has a link.

        • wander1236
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          107 months ago

          They absolutely do send emails like this. They’ve got a monitoring service if you have a credit card with them to check for data breaches, and most credit cards and even banks I’ve seen do the same. I just got my monthly monitoring update email this morning from Discover, thankfully telling me they didn’t find anything.