carouselsilver
Member
- Location
- Eastern PA
This morning, I found an email claiming that someone had tried to log on to my Amazon Prime mobile account. Ninety percent of my internet time is spent on my PC, and I rarely use my Smartphone for anything. So I first called my husband to make sure he hadn't forgotten the password and attempted to log in. He had not. Next, I called the customer service number, and reached someone with a hard to understand accent, which is another peeve. I am already upset and worried and now I have to decipher what this guy is saying. So I told him about the email and that there had been three notifications that someone was trying to access my mobile account. He advised me to change my password, so I set out to do that on the Amazon website. After changing it, I got a notification that a validation code had been sent to a mobile phone ending in 04. Not my phone number, not even close. So I called again to find out why they were sending a validation code to a strange mobile number?
In the meantime, I get another email from Amazon telling me that the emails I had received earlier were spoofs, and that I shouldn't respond to them. No kidding? Now, I was really freaking out. Maybe the validation had gone to whomever was trying to hack in. I called back, and got idiot number two. He proceeded to request me to repeat my identifying info three times, and kept mumbling and apologizing, so I finally asked for a supervisor, thinking this might make things go faster. He pulled the classic customer service ploy; put me on hold for awhile.
I hung up and called back, to speak with idiot number three. Well, at first she wasn't an idiot, but it deteriorated fast. After giving my proofs of identity, she asked why I was saying that this mobile number that they were trying to text to, wasn't mine. I asked her where she had gotten it? She said that it was an old number, from back in 2004. I pointed out that I hadn't owned a cell phone then. She insisted that it was a mobile number that had once belonged to me. Again I repeated that it wasn't my phone number, because first of all I had not owned a cell phone that year and if I had, it wouldn't have had the area code she was giving, since I lived out of state during that year. She tried to tell me that I had to give a mobile number, and I refused. Why not email? Finally, I got it resolved. But at vast cost of wasted time and energy; an hour of my life that I won't get back. Even worse, I later checked the headers of those emails and saw that they were genuinely from Amazon in the first place.

In the meantime, I get another email from Amazon telling me that the emails I had received earlier were spoofs, and that I shouldn't respond to them. No kidding? Now, I was really freaking out. Maybe the validation had gone to whomever was trying to hack in. I called back, and got idiot number two. He proceeded to request me to repeat my identifying info three times, and kept mumbling and apologizing, so I finally asked for a supervisor, thinking this might make things go faster. He pulled the classic customer service ploy; put me on hold for awhile.
I hung up and called back, to speak with idiot number three. Well, at first she wasn't an idiot, but it deteriorated fast. After giving my proofs of identity, she asked why I was saying that this mobile number that they were trying to text to, wasn't mine. I asked her where she had gotten it? She said that it was an old number, from back in 2004. I pointed out that I hadn't owned a cell phone then. She insisted that it was a mobile number that had once belonged to me. Again I repeated that it wasn't my phone number, because first of all I had not owned a cell phone that year and if I had, it wouldn't have had the area code she was giving, since I lived out of state during that year. She tried to tell me that I had to give a mobile number, and I refused. Why not email? Finally, I got it resolved. But at vast cost of wasted time and energy; an hour of my life that I won't get back. Even worse, I later checked the headers of those emails and saw that they were genuinely from Amazon in the first place.
