Adobe 8 scam
The reason i used adobe because they have their own cloud for backups. It disappeared on the cloud. So stop saying i didnt back it up or save it. Anyways i do not need anyones help any longer. Learned my lesson. Adobe community wall was def a horrible experiance. Thank you everyone for that! You run out of gas on the highway and ask others not to buy the same brand of car because it breaks down.
This is not serious. If you have not made a backup of this important document, you can only blame yourself. If you don't make backups, don't expect much sympathy. There is of course no need for us to take the time to point this out, and you may not welcome the reply, but some of us feel strongly that if someone has a problem and doesn't back up, then they are the author of their own misfortune.
Nobody should ever lose more than a days work, when the inevitable happens. Last thing i want is to be bashed for something i did not intentionally do. It says to be kind and respectful on adobe communinty wall and you two have been anything but that so before i report you leave. If that would be the case, did you used to work with an old version of Adobe Acrobat Reader prior to the DC version? The second detail that baffles me about Customer Support suggestion is, how come does enrolling in a paid subscription of Acrobat Pro DC would resolve the issue of repairing a file that is sitting in the Document Cloud with a corrupt XML metadata?
Then again, assuming that you had an old version of Adobe Reader, did you just upgraded to Adobe Acrobat Reader DC recently, and upon uploading or sharing the file to the Document Cloud, the file became corrupt? That advice doesn't make sense and upgrading or switching over to Acrobat would not solve this issue. Perhaps it's because Adobe do not offer support for free software at all.
Maybe they were really saying "if you had a paid product we could talk to you. If you don't pay we can't and won't look at your problem". Which is fair enough. This email I received is obviously a phishing scam…if you know what to look for. Adobe has been struck recently by back-to-back zero-day flaws in Adobe Flash. One of those Flash zero-days was exploited by attackers to gain access to the RSA Security network and compromise sensitive information. To put it bluntly, there is ample reason for IT admins and consumers to be on high alert for security updates from Adobe.
Scams that are initiated from compromised accounts are particularly dangerous, for a number of reasons: The emails are sent from a legitimate account, so they are not likely to be blocked by email security services, The recipients are more receptive to the emails because they are from a legitimate service, and especially where the sender is known to them, and Because they may deliver a malicious payload, or simply a link to a file like these examples, directing users to external phishing pages to harvest credentials.
As a precaution, MailGuard urges you not to click links within emails that: Are not addressed to you by name. Appear to be from a legitimate company but use poor English, or omit personal details that a legitimate sender would include.
Are from businesses that you were not expecting to hear from, and Take you to a landing page or website that is not the legitimate URL of the company the email is purporting to be sent from. One email is all that it takes All that it takes to break into your business is a cleverly-worded email message.
Back to Blog Comments:. Something Powerful Tell The Reader More The headline and subheader tells us what you're offering , and the form header closes the deal. Remember: Bullets are great For spelling out benefits and Turning visitors into leads. Subscribe to Email Updates.
Recent Posts. Security vendor MX Lab picked up on it last July and then again in September , all with the same message and intent. In September, MX Lab reached out to MailChimp, the e-mail service provider that the spammers used to send out their messages. Once alerted, MailChimp suspended the account. But the recent outbreak of the same scam shows that cybercrooks can easily move from one provider to another.
Adobe is aware of this particular Adobe Reader upgrade scam and has in the past cautioned people to watch out for it. Of course, Adobe Reader is a free product, so the request for credit card information should be a tip-off that something's not right here.