Αποτελέσματα Αναζήτησης
Learn to identify, prevent, and report scams. If you've received suspicious communications or found a suspicious website claiming to be from Amazon, visit the following Help pages: How to identify fake emails. How to identify fake text messages/SMS. How to identify fake phone calls. How to identify fake websites. What is an impersonation scam?
- Report Something Suspicious
We take fraud, scam, phishing and spoofing attempts...
- Enable Two-Step Verification
Visit the Amazon Customer Service site to find answers to...
- Your Orders
Access your Amazon order history, manage payments and...
- Report Something Suspicious
We take fraud, scam, phishing and spoofing attempts seriously. If you receive a correspondence you think may not be from Amazon, report it immediately. To have the best advice on what actions to take, select the most appropriate link: If you don't have an Amazon account.
If you have received suspicious communication claiming to be from Amazon and you don't have an account with us, report it at reportascam@amazon.com. For more information on the most common scam tactics, visit Scam trends.
Amazon will never ask you to provide your personal information or to make a payment outside of our website. For more tips on how to avoid and report scams, check out our Help page. Recommended Topics Hi. How can we help you? Replace an Item; Find a Missing Parcel That Shows As Delivered; Undeliverable Packages; Unknown Charges
Visit the Amazon Customer Service site to find answers to common problems, use online chat, or call customer service phone number at 1-888-280-4331 for support.
To report a phishing or unsolicited email to Amazon, open a new email and attach the email that you suspect is fake. Send the email to reportascam@amazon.com. Sending the suspicious email as an attachment is the best way for us to track it.
5 Μαρ 2024 · Scammers use a combination of sophisticated techniques as well as social engineering to exploit consumer trust. Using unsolicited contact via email, phone calls, text, social media, and other communication tools, scammers pretend to be legitimate, well-known brands and institutions, like Amazon, and design scams that manipulate victims.