Is this a spam?

rozzie2008

New member
I rec'd an email from a samanthawilson@hearst.com. It states that I am a winner in the June Good Housekeeping contest I supposedly won a "Beauty Loot" bundle (1 of 10 winners out of 10,000 entries). She asks for my mailing address so she can send it out ASAP. Signed message - Best, Samantha.

Very amateurish sounding! Am I right in thinking that it is spam?
 
rozzie2008 - did you enter;

GoodHouseKeeping.com June Beauty Loot Sweepstakes
Enter to win to win our editors' top beauty picks! (ARV: $234)
Restrictions : 18+ US, DC, Canada excludes Quebec | Hits : 828 | Added : 05-20-15 | Expired : 06-18-2015 11:59 PM EST | Rules

Entry Category : One Entry



Top 10 Signs that Your Win is Really a Sweepstakes Scam
http://www.sweepsadvantage.com/forum/newbies/2235-top-10-signs-your-win-really-sweepstakes-scam.html

1. You Need to Pay to Receive the Prize
2. You Don't Recognize the Sweepstake
3. You Receive a Large Check with your Notification
4. You Are Asked to Wire Money
5. You Are Pressured to Act in a Hurry
6. You Need to Provide Bank or Credit Card Info to Receive Your Prize
7. The Win is From a Lottery
8. The Win is From a Foreign Lottery
9. The Notification is From a Government Organization
10. The Notification is Sent Via Bulk Mail


How do you tell?
http://www.sweepsadvantage.com/forum/general-sweepstakes-talk/76084-how-do-you-tell.html

Some steps I use to ensure legitimacy:

1. Ask yourself if this is a sweepstakes that you remember entering. If you never entered for the prize that you just "won" the odds of being a scam are probably high.
2. The notification should come from a business or prize service e-mail address. Anything from an e-mail that anyone can create (IE: @hotmail.com, @yahoo.com, @gmail.com, @outlook.com etc. is a red flag.)
3. Correspondence should look professional. Any forms to be filled out and returned should look like they're from a business. IE: Not a bunch of misspellings, bad grammar, etc.

4. If you need to return any forms make sure they are going to a business e-mail address or a company street address/fax # (Just Google the street address or phone # to check)... either of the company putting on the sweeps or the sweepstakes service company administering it. IE: Don't send anything with your SS# to a residential address or a PO Box.
Note: Any prize won with a value of $600 or more WILL require you to submit your Social Security # to the company for tax purposes. This does NOT mean it's a scam. Some companies will also require it for prizes with values under $600.

5. Don't send anyone $ in order to claim a prize. Anything tax-related you will do on your own with federal/state filings.
6. All "foreign lotteries" are scams. Either that or the UK owes me a ton of money. har har.

7. Be careful with what sweeps you are entering. A sweepstakes from Coca-Cola is much safer to enter than from "WinMoneyNOW! LLC" or whatever. Prevention is the best medicine sometimes. Sites like sweepsadvantage are good because 95% of the sweeps they post/screen I feel comfortable with entering. Just avoid anything that gives you bad feelings... always safer that way.

Good luck with your sweeping! :)
 
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