Scam. Suspicious URL, slightly off grammer. Classic phishing.
Contact seller if unsure.
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Scam. Suspicious URL, slightly off grammer. Classic phishing.
Contact seller if unsure.
Bruh, just look at the address bar. That is not a USPS domain. Obviously it's a scam.
One thing to note, aside from all the other inconsistencies, that tracking number does not follow the standard tracking number format for a USPS package. The USPS website describes their different tracking numbers for their different services in the FAQ at the bottom of their tracking page. https://tools.usps.com/go/TrackConfirmAction_input
Aside from all of the red flags already listed in other comments....are you even expecting a package to be delivered? I almost never receive a package that I don't expect
Report this at https://reportfraud.ftc.gov/.
Also, because they’re using Bitly for URL obfuscation report it to them at https://bitly.com/pages/trust/report-abuse.
For any of the fake domains you run into report it to both the registrar of the domain as well as the owner of the actual IP address it points to.
UPS and American companies in general
But this is USPS, which isn't an American company, it's a US independent agency.
Their mandate isn't (AFAIK...) to make a profit, but rather to serve the mail requirements of a very large country.
Personally, my experiences with USPS have been generally positive, from passports for infants to free change-of-address forwarding service to tracking down quasi-scam products from Amazon. YMMV though.
Go to the official UPS website (do not click that link, google it) and enter your tracking number.
If you don't have a tracking number it means you didn't order anything, and it's certainly a scam.
This is usps, not ups, but everything else is accurate.
Always check the real site without using a link to get there.
Ive had packages come to the building and the postal worker not knowing which box to put it in so it went back to the post office and the tracking indicating unsuccessful delivery due to unknown address (or something similar). In these cases, call or visit the post office doing the delivery or the company. The tracking number will be the key piece of information you can tie to a partial address. In smaller communities, this wont even happen as just placing a name on a package can get a successful delivery since the postal worker knows everyone in the community.
If you want to be extra sure, just contact USPS directly.
Look at the domain name in the url. Not legit
I get these scam texts all the time. It's 100% a scam, and now that you've clicked it, you'll probably get a bunch more scam in the near future, so be extra cautious.
In addition to everything else: for weeks our building has been receiving packages addressed only with a name, a number, S, and the zip. The name is someone who has never lived here and may not exist. There's no apartment number. Our street doesn't start with S, if anything the S is for South. It's obviously some kind of fraud, because what's in the packages are little metal clips to clamp the starting tape holding stuff on a pallet. Not anything for residential use. They ship from various Amazon warehouses but through USPS. We can't get the mailman or Amazon people to return them and the Amazon return process only works if the unwanted package is addressed to you, not some random name.
But I'm now sure as hell that USPS isn't going to let anything as trivial as an unclear address stop them from delivering the package SOMEWHERE. Anything to call it "delivered."
That scam is called "brushing."
Amazon does have a report process for it, but yeah it's most likely to go into the Ai chipper.
Make your life easier: NEVER click on any link in an email.
In this case, if you are actually waiting for a USPS package, go to usps.com, enter your package number manually, and see if it tracks.
ITT things that make my chest tighten painfully
Hell my paranoid ass would reinstall windows and change all my passwords after visiting an obvious scam site like that.
Yeah. I was getting these almost daily for a few months. Never responded to them and never missed any expected packages.
As others have said, that is definitely a link to a fake website.
It's a scam. You can tell because you're getting it via a rcs text. I've never once seen a business use an encrypted text.
Also the URL of course.
Edit: nvm just discovered some doctors offices do indeed use encrypted protocols for SMS. So the text being RCS isn't inherently suspicious. Businesses may use it. But obviously the URL gives away that it's a scam.