Question:

I wanna information about australian internation lotttry .they send me emial i have one million doller .?

by  |  earlier

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but i dont partispace in any lottery . plz give me information.

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7 ANSWERS


  1. scam!!!!


  2. its probably fake it happens to me every day confirming i one money

  3. Don't believe that, I've got 1 email like that. They will ask you 4 your credit card's number. Then they use it 4 illegal business. Then tomorrow you will fine out that you lost all of your credit.

  4. The e-mail that you received is a scam. The lottery that you supposedly won is just a con that a scammer is using to get you to send him money. This whole thing seems too good to be true because it IS too good to be true.

    Fake lottery scams are very simple. The scammer finds your e-mail address somewhere on the Internet and adds it to the mass-mailing list. He bombards hundreds, if not thousands, of e-mail addresses with the lottery e-mail.

    Anybody who replies is being scammed. The con artist will soon ask the victim to wire money for "fees." There might be a courier fee to have the lottery check delivered, for example. Or maybe the victim is supposed to send money to cover taxes or insurance.

    After the victim sends the first payment, the scammer will return with another excuse. The victim will continue sending money until he or she is either broke, or realizes that the whole thing is a scam. Either way, the money that was sent to the bad guy is gone - and the victim never sees so much as a hint of the prize money.

    To confirm that the e-mail you have is a scam, do one or more of the following:

    Copy part of the original e-mail and paste it into a search engine. Anti-scam sites archive and publish known scam e-mails in an effort to help potential victims before they fall for the scams.

    If you received an e-mail that claims to be from a company like Yahoo!, MSN, AOL, Toyota, et cetera, open a fresh browser window and manually enter that company's official Web site address. The company will have, at the most, a fraud warning. But you will not find advertising about the company's so-called lottery. This is because these companies do not have lotteries.

    When you receive e-mails that claim to be from real lotteries (like the UK Lottery), go visit the official Web site. There is usually an anti-fraud warning present. Real lottery commissions do not have your e-mail address. How can they notify you that you won if you didn't give them this information? And if you never bought a ticket for that lottery, then how can you win? You cannot, because lottery commissions do not give away tickets for free. If they did, then they would quickly run out of money for the prize pool.

    If you still aren't sure, you should contact your local police department. Many departments are aware of these scams, and will tell you that the person who sent you this e-mail is a con artist who is simply trying to take your money.

    The best thing to do when you receive one of these e-mails is to simply delete it and move on. Reporting the user to the provider to have the e-mail account closed can interfere with an active law-enforcement investigation.

    You can also warn people you know about these scams. The more people we all tell, the fewer potential victims these low-life scammers will have.

    http://www.scamwarners.com is an excellent Web site for more information about fake lottery scams and other, similar cons.

  5. This is a SCAM. Check out the below link for confirmation of various email scams hitting the internet, including the famous Yahoo/MSN lottery scams and how to report them :

    http://www.consumerfraudreporting.org/pr...

    http://help.yahoo.com/l/us/yahoo/mail/or...

    Unscrupulous thieves have sent you this email and they are trying to part you from your hard earned cash. They will often ask you to call a premium rate number and keep you holding on whilst you rack up a huge phone bill. They are then paid a large proportion of this phone bill. They may ask you to divulge personal information about yourself or ask for your bank or credit card details. Do not divulge any such information under any circumstances. It is surprising how many innocent victims have been duped by these types of emails. Just remember the thieves who send them are very clever and extremely convincing. I suggest you delete the email and send it into cyberspace, hopefully along with the thieving scumbags who send them.

    Check out these sites for further information :

    http://www.scambusters.com

    http://www.hoax-slayer.com/

  6. LOL... i have won the irish, english lottoery more then a few times..  there fake.

  7. It's really simple.  If you didn't personally purchase a lottery ticket, you didn't win.

    Think about it.  How would you feel if you bought a Powerball ticket, and then found out later that some guy in Australia who had never paid to play had been given the prize.  You'd be mad.

    For the same reason other countries do not offer any kind of non-pay international lottery.

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