YES----delete,delete,delete.
> On April 2, 2020 at 12:28 PM Lawrence Woods <lmwoods@xxxxxxx> wrote:
>
>
> I got a phishing spoof Olympus email:
>
> From: olympus@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx (though the detailed
> headers show a source of mkt1931.com)
> Subject: Thank you for registering
> Date: Wed 1 Apr 2020 1:55 +0000 (GMT)
>
> After a genuine-looking blue and gold Olympus logo, the message started
>
> YOUR REGISTRATION IS NOW COMPLETE
>
> Hi laWRENCE,
>
> Thank you for registering your Olympus OM-D E-M5.
>
> Please keep this email for your records. Your product
> registration summary is listed below.
>
> Model Name: OM-D E-M5
> Serial Number: (redacted)
>
> And followed with links labeled with references to a *getolympus.com*
> account, *sign up now*, an offer of 10% off accessories with a
> click-box, and so on. All links actually went to two URLs at
> links.mkt1931.com.
>
> Whoever sent this had my email address, and the correct serial number
> for the Mark I E-M5 that I bought 5-1/2 years ago! Other than Olympus,
> where else would they have gotten the serial number from? I can't
> imagine that the camera store had the serial number recorded in a database.
>
> Has anyone else gotten similar emails?
>
> ----- Larry Woods
>
> --
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> Themed Olympus Photo Exhibition: http://www.tope.nl/
>
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