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    16 commenti

    1. Yes. We get those here nearly every day. It’s a scam. Spelling is bad, look at the e-mail-address it’s coming from, and that link looks fishy af. Delete, don’t click on a link.

    2. whiteraven4 on

      We had the exact same post yesterday. Just with a different obviously scam URL.

    3. Sender address doesn’t make any sense. URL is also not the offical for dhl. Definitely a scam

    4. Wandowaiato on

      .top …. NO, for sure no scam…. Wo bleibt euer gesunder Menschenverstand? Die Internetadresse schreit doch nach Verarsche. Deutsche Post ohne .de Adresse? No, way.

    5. Do you even expect a package? If not, that should be the first red flag.

    6. med_bruh on

      For the 5839210406th time. It is a scam. Just look at the link and compare it with the official link from DHL when you google DHL. It doesn’t take that much effort. Also DHL uses correct German if you know german.

    7. slaf4egp on

      Most typical scams that I receive on my handy are DHL packages.

      There are easy rules to identify scams. Have you been expecting anything? If not, you should become suspicious. Does the sender number looks suspicious? Does it contain some kind of request to fill an unknown form? Does it contain any kind of personal information (BIG EXCEPTION: Internet nicknames)?

      Since it’s Germany, if there is some issue that has to be taken care of, you’re way more likely to receive an official letter and not a message on your phone. Stay vigilant, do some extra research on the topic and stay safe. Scammers are human trash.

      Same goes for inheritance scams, free iPhones and other crap that you may get. Be assured, if it’s real and urgent, you’ll be contacted personally and officially.

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