A text message just showed up on my cell phone.
It looks like this:
USPS ECCC SMS: Your shipment has been processed at our facility but is currently on hold due to incomplete ad dress information. To facilitate timely del ivery, we request you verify your addr ess through the link provided below:
https://tinyurl.com/5jw……
(Reply to 1, keep the SMS and open the SMS activation link again or copy the link to open in Goo gle Chrome.)
I’ve cut off the rest of the link to the tinyurl because clicking that link could be hazardous to you.
The message came from a phone number out of Tajikistan.
So I googled the header (USPS ECCC SMS) and lo and behold, it’s a Postal Service scam called “Smishing”.
Since the warning and how to deal with it come from a Government URL Fair Use does not apply:
Read about it here: https://www.uspis.gov/news/scam-article/smishing-package-tracking-text-scams
Smishing: Package Tracking Text Scams
Have you received unsolicited mobile text messages with an unfamiliar or strange web link that indicates a USPS delivery requires a response from you? If you never signed up for a USPS tracking request for a specific package, then don’t click the link! This type of text message is a scam called smishing.
Smishing is a form of phishing that involves a text message or phone number. Victims will typically receive a deceptive text message that is intended to lure the recipient into providing their personal or financial information. These scammers often attempt to disguise themselves as a government agency, bank, or other company to lend legitimacy to their claims. USPS utilizes the 5-digit short codes to send and receive SMS to and from mobile phones.
The criminals want to receive personally identifiable information (PII) about the victim such as: account usernames and passwords, Social Security number, date of birth, credit and debit card numbers, personal identification numbers (PINs), or other sensitive information. This information is used to carry out other crimes, such as financial fraud.
The Postal Service offers free tools to track specific packages, but customers are required to either register online, or initiate a text message, and provide a tracking number. USPS does not charge for these services! USPS will not send customers text messages or e-mails without a customer first requesting the service with a tracking number, and it will NOT contain a link. So, if you did not initiate the tracking request for a specific package directly from USPS and it contains a link: don’t click the link!
If you suspect the text message you have received is suspicious but are expecting a parcel, please do not click on any links. Rather, report it and visit USPS.com from your mobile device or computer for tracking and additional resources.
For more information about these services and other products, please visit USPS TEXT TRACKING FAQs:
To protect yourself and others from consumer frauds, visit our fraud prevention page.
HOW TO REPORT USPS Related SMISHING:
To report USPS related smishing, send an email to spam@uspis.gov.
- Without clicking on the web link, copy the body of the suspicious text message and paste into a new email.
- Provide your name in the email, and also attach a screenshot of the text message showing the phone number of the sender and the date sent.
- Include any relevant details in your email, for example: if you clicked the link, if you lost money, if you provided any personal information, or if you experienced any impacts to your credit or person.
- The Postal Inspection Service will contact you if more information is needed.
- Forward the smishing/text message to 7726 (this will assist with reporting the scam phone number).
Complaints of non-USPS related smishing can also be sent to any of the following law enforcement partners of the U.S. Postal Inspection Service:
Stay vigilant folks, they are out to get your personal details a million ways nowadays!