314-390-0475
Country: USA
314 area code:
Missouri (Florissant, St. Louis)
Read comments below about 3143900475. Report unwanted calls to help identify who is using this phone number.
- VigilantI received a spam message via e-mail, which contained the above number as a contact.
It was clearly a lame attempt to get you to call this scammer.
Spam message contents was as follows:
Subject: Good News: Your Invoice Receipt VWUR-9310-VTWB-7293 Has Been Confirmed
McAfee
Subscription date: Friday, September 06, 2024
Subscription number: 866-24-550-2691
Thank You for Your Order Confirmation Inside
Hello <e-mail address removed>,
It brings us immense joy to announce that your McAfee plan has been successfully renewed. We are excited to continue serving you, and your subscription is now active from the date of renewal.
Feel free to contact our dedicated support team at +1 (314) 390-0475 for any inquiries or assistance. Your satisfaction is our top priority.
Here are the renewal details for McAfee
Invoice Receipt Number:- VWUR-9310-VTWB-7293
Service:- McAfee PC Membership
Client:- <e-mail address removed>
Client Email:- <e-mail address removed>
Quantity:- 2x
Tenure:- 4 Years
Payment Mode:- Auto Debit
Charged:- USD 660.00
Have a question about your order? Feel free to reach us at +1 (314) 390-0475 for swift assistance. Please have your subscription no or Invoice Receipt Number ready for quicker service.
Do not respond to this email, thank you. The system created this email. You won't get a response since the mailbox is not watched.
Thanks for a great year.
Thanks again,
Billing head: Liam.I Clark
Team McAfee
Customer Care: +1 (314) 390-0475- Caller: Uttam Kumar Sarkar
- Call type: Scam suspicion
- SkepticalI recieved 2 email same as above on the same day. One saying renewal for 500 and a second one for 800
- Caller: Claims McAfee Email
- Call type: Scam suspicion
- MikeHuntletonSCAM ALERT! This is a Fake Invoice / Refund Tech Support Scam !
This is a typical refund scam. No company EVER charges someone, then contacts you to dispute or cancel/refund it. The message is to get you to call and they will pretend to give you a refund, but it is just a trick to get access to your computer."...are you in front of the computer ?..." ONLY scammers ask this!
Scammers want to connect to your computer with remote access, asking you to connect via a website or download it and give them access. They will lie and say it is a "secure server" or similar to gain your trust in letting them on your computer. They will say you need to fill out an online refund form, then ask you to log into your bank. They pretend to give you the refund, but more than the amount stated. Then they manipulate the HTML to make it seem as if they over paid the amount and want you to reimburse it back by getting gift cards. No money is ever really transferred, but they act as if it was.
Banks transfer money bank to bank direct and never involve a person's personal computer! No business would ever ask you to go get Gift Cards as a payment method and ask you to stay on the phone the whole time. ONLY SCAMMERS DO THAT!!
Only a Scammer would want Remote Access to give a Refund.
Never allow anyone Remote Access unless you know them to be reputable and you contacted them first! Scammers can lock you out and hold your computer ransom by changing your username password or with Syskey (Microsoft SAM Lock Tool).
Help spread the word and prevent someone from becoming a victim.
Fact:- ANYONE who calls or emails you and says you have been charged for something, offering a refund is a SCAMMER.
- ANYONE who calls or emails you and says your computer called/contacted them is a SCAMMER.
- ANYONE who calls or emails you and says your online server called/contacted them is a SCAMMER.
- Windows Operating System licenses do not expire on store bought personal computers.
- ANYONE who calls or emails you with a message about your computer having illegal activity, is a SCAMMER.
- Apple will never, ever call you about alleged suspicious iCloud activity.
- Microsoft error and warning messages never include phone numbers. ANY Tech Support Warning pop-ups you get while accessing the internet asking you to call a number or visit a website, is from a SCAMMER.
- Web Browsers DO NOT have the ability to determine and warn you your computer has an error. They can only warn you about a potential malicious website. A Browser is software that allows you to surf the Internet, not diagnose a computer or phone.
- ANY Tech Support company that insists you need their services because of some error, outdated software or tries to convince you that you need to allow them remote access is a SCAMMER.
- Nobody could possibly know if your computer or devices have an issue unless you tell them or gave them access.
- Tech Support companies DO NOT call or email to give out refunds because they are "going out of business", or to "cancel a subscription". Companies DO NOT give refunds unless they have to.
- Companies DO NOT call to inform you that your subscription will be charged if you don't call back, only SCAMMERS do that. If you have a subscription with someone, they automatically charge you until you cancel it and they don't give a refund.
- Only a Scammer would want Remote Access to give a Refund.
- 3rd party Tech services DO NOT include Email account repairing or password resetting, since they can not access the email server unless it belongs to them.
- ONLY scammers ask for gift cards and NOBODY would ask you to go to the store while remaining on the phone while you do.
Please read about how Tech Support Scammers operate the scams and warn everyone possible about them.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Technical_support_scam
Microsoft - Protect yourself from Tech Scams
Apple -Phony support calls, and other scams
Norton - Online Scams 101
FTC - tech-support-scams
How Tech Support Scams Work
Never trust a caller who wants to "help your computer" for any reason (unless you contacted them first), as they are only going to scam you. If you need Tech Support, you should contact a reputable local service.
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