Bogus Yahoo Email Picks Up Credit Card Numbers
PALO ALTO, Calif. (Reuters) - Yahoo Inc. said on Thursday that some of its customers had been tricked into giving their credit card numbers to an unaffiliated third party that had posed as Yahoo in a mass e-mail.
Yahoo, which has a billing relationship with more than one million customers who pay for such services as expanded e-mail and online matchmaking, sent out its own mass e-mail Thursday morning advising customers not to respond to the bogus request.
A company spokeswoman said less than 24 hours had transpired between the time the fraudulent e-mail went out and the time that Yahoo sent out the advisory.
She said some customers had fallen for the e-mail request and supplied credit card information, but the majority had not.
The source of the fraudulent e-mail was not known.
Yahoo used to provide all of its content and online services for free, but has increasingly been charging for some enhanced services as a way to reduce its dependence on Internet advertising.
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