How to report fraudulant transaction under Mozilla
My screen was hijacked by something lacked look like Mozilla/Firefox heading saying it was taking a survey and I couldn't get out of the screen. So I took the survey and entered my credit card info for a sum of $1.00 (one dollar) for a chance to win an iPhone. Instead I got a charge on my credit card from lstfl.com for $33.+ dollars saying it enrolled me in a sex site. That is NOT what I imagined. And it came under Mozilla/Firefox name. Can you go after this site as it is operating under your name and logo. Thank you
Chosen solution
tizart said
My screen was hijacked by something lacked look like Mozilla/Firefox heading saying it was taking a survey and I couldn't get out of the screen. So I took the survey and entered my credit card info for a sum of $1.00 (one dollar) for a chance to win an iPhone. Instead I got a charge on my credit card from lstfl.com for $33.+ dollars saying it enrolled me in a sex site. That is NOT what I imagined. And it came under Mozilla/Firefox name. Can you go after this site as it is operating under your name and logo. Thank you
So basically you fell for a scam site that popped up from a malvertising Ad. The so called $1 shipping is a big red flag (for an expensive phone?) and the prize was a phone that is say $1000 should be a huge flag in showing the whole being suspicious and perhaps likely too good to be true.
I have seen Mozilla have had actual prizes or gifts for some things in past but they were cheap like say a t-shirt or such plus the were on *.mozilla.org pages. Examples of this were limited t-shirts given to third-party Add-on developers who met certain criteria.
The company Mozilla that makes the Firefox web browser has never had such random expensive items in variations of this scam. The fake prizes have been for Samsung S8 or S9, a $1000 gift card from say Amazon or a iPhone X.
This scam is to get personal information from whose who fall for it like name, address, phone#, email and the fake very cheap $1 or $2 dollar shipping is to get the credit card information.
The site page that had the fake survey on could be reported at https://www.mozilla.org/about/legal/fraud-report/ while the lstfl site was related to the billing.
You should contact your credit card company about these charges and perhaps get a new one.
Read this answer in context 👍 0All Replies (4)
. Whenever you get a message / popup like that;
DO NOT USE ANY OF THE PROVIDED LINKS OR ANY PHONE NUMBERS ! !
Such messages are only Spam that could lead you to Fake Support. Not only can they damage or hack your system, they charge you to do so.
You can report such a site at; Google Report Phishing Page {web link} which is the same when done while on site by going to Help > Report Web Forgery
Help us safeguard Mozilla’s trademarks by reporting misuse {web link}
Call your bank and report this N O W ! ! ! !
A way out of a trap page is to (force it if needed) Close Firefox. Wait about 20 seconds for Firefox to finish closing. Right-click on the Firefox icon and select Open New Window. +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ Sometimes this works. If it opens, close it by Menu > File > Exit. This will flush out that web page from the Session Store.
Go to the Mozilla Add-ons Web Page {web Link} (There’s a lot of good stuff here) and search for a good ad blocker.
Modified
Suluhisho teule
tizart said
My screen was hijacked by something lacked look like Mozilla/Firefox heading saying it was taking a survey and I couldn't get out of the screen. So I took the survey and entered my credit card info for a sum of $1.00 (one dollar) for a chance to win an iPhone. Instead I got a charge on my credit card from lstfl.com for $33.+ dollars saying it enrolled me in a sex site. That is NOT what I imagined. And it came under Mozilla/Firefox name. Can you go after this site as it is operating under your name and logo. Thank you
So basically you fell for a scam site that popped up from a malvertising Ad. The so called $1 shipping is a big red flag (for an expensive phone?) and the prize was a phone that is say $1000 should be a huge flag in showing the whole being suspicious and perhaps likely too good to be true.
I have seen Mozilla have had actual prizes or gifts for some things in past but they were cheap like say a t-shirt or such plus the were on *.mozilla.org pages. Examples of this were limited t-shirts given to third-party Add-on developers who met certain criteria.
The company Mozilla that makes the Firefox web browser has never had such random expensive items in variations of this scam. The fake prizes have been for Samsung S8 or S9, a $1000 gift card from say Amazon or a iPhone X.
This scam is to get personal information from whose who fall for it like name, address, phone#, email and the fake very cheap $1 or $2 dollar shipping is to get the credit card information.
The site page that had the fake survey on could be reported at https://www.mozilla.org/about/legal/fraud-report/ while the lstfl site was related to the billing.
You should contact your credit card company about these charges and perhaps get a new one.
Modified