

Notwithstanding it had ended up junked there, nothing was yet suspicious about the whole thing, so I proceeded with reading it. I checked my spam folder and spotted the missed first letter the dude is referring to here. I’m 79 so it will be hard for me to go again. I asked my son David to climb Ochi again as I missed getting shots of the houses last year. My son and his wife and two grandsons have a house on Evia. I was interested in hi-res versions of a couple of shots of the dragon houses of Ochi. Hi again, I wrote to you some weeks ago but haven’t received a reply yet. The scamming operation began with an email sent to me via my blog’s contact form, from the address It read as follows:
WETRANSFER ON IPHONE DOWNLOAD
But dude, if that was by any chance the case, you should stop requesting random folks on the internet to download your shit from WeTransfer.

That’s why I feel obliged to express my reserved apologies to the involved person, for a highly unlikely case he was not, after all, a scammer but just a silly old man. In fact, this scamming attack was so subtle and personalized that, to this day, I maintain a trace of doubt, however slight, with regard to whether it indeed was a fraud. In all my time examining online scams and teasing their perpetrators, never have I before run across a so sophisticated phishing attempt like this WeTransfer scam I am about to describe in this article.
