

Hallo, die Frage ist also, sind diese Mails gefälscht/betrügen? Ich habe bereits in 2010-2013 in Finnland gelebt. Ich war ungefähr 8-11 Jahre alt und hatte damals keine Google Mail. Aber meine Oma, die über 20 Jahre in Finnland lebte, und als sie in den Ruhestand ging, verließ sie Finnland im Jahr 2023. Ich bekam finnische Mails, als sie in den Ruhestand ging und zurück nach Estland zurückkam. Ich habe seit ungefähr 3 Jahren keine Verbindung zu Finnland und meine Mutter hat meine Aufenthaltserlaubnis in Finnland entfernt. Die Hauptfrage ist also, wie ich finnische Mails bekomme, woher haben sie meine Mail?
https://www.reddit.com/gallery/1ncf1zm
Von xxangeliccutie
15 Kommentare
Scam. Impossibly poor Finnish gives it away
Both look like scam.
You can try their own pages to double check.
Check the sender address.
100÷ scam
The first one has so big errors in language, that it can’t be from real Finnish company.
The second one has also mistakes, but not as big.
If there are URL’s in those messages, those would give it away instantly.
How can I prevent myself from receiving these Finnish scam emails?
If you are ever in doubt about these, just go to the site that they are impersonating, but not through any of the provided links.
NEVER click on any links in emails or texts.
In this instance you’d go to POP banks official site, log in and check if there’s any offcial messages in their banking site etc.. if still in doubt, message customer support.
Again, NEVER click on the links and definitely NEVER log in through the portals the links provide.
It’s always scam. Why would they contact you via email?
Scam 100% Banks or government offices never send you links. A bank may send a notice about important message being available, but they want you to sign into their own website using secure sign-in, but NEVER by using a link.
That’s verified scam
Omg, these are so obvious scams. But it is sad that there are even natives who will fall for them.
Most likely a scam. Easy way to verify is to check the sender email. Often it is a gibberish email address or something that looks like the official sender but there is obvious typos. And official government emails typically dont give you a link to click to fix the issue, but tell you to login to X service, be it vero, kela or whatever
Easy rule of thumb: if it requests you to click something, button, link, anything, it’s a scam. Don’t do it even if you feel you should. Banks etc. will just ask you to log in their service without any of those in the actual message.
Easy rule of thumb: if it requests you to click something, button, link, anything, it’s a scam. Don’t do it even if you feel you should. Banks etc. will just ask you to log in their service without any of those in the actual message.
No dots on the Ä´s in the first one. dead giveaway. Also horrible typo in „**eaa**mantilanteissa“