A surprising scam email that evaded Gmail's spam filter(jamesbvaughan.com) |
A surprising scam email that evaded Gmail's spam filter(jamesbvaughan.com) |
The whole "put a misleading string in the PayPal name field" thing may be new.
> How would they even validate their new attack vector? I would like to think that there’s scam A/B testing or something similar…
I'm curious about that as well. My guess is that there's nothing as sophisticated as A/B tests with measured results going on, but I'd love to learn more.
They will typically change their name to scam text just like the one here and share an album in iCloud Photos to the victim. This will trigger a legit notification email from Apple to you and a push notification on your Apple devices. Both has low chance of being filtered by anyone.
Moral aspect apart, it is a very clever way of exploiting a system.