Laughing Gull
New member
- Oct 18, 2022
- 6
Here's the conversation. Apologies for language.
Hotel Zaida.Yikes. I'm just booking a hotel in Seville through Bookings.com! Which one?
Any legit messages from the hotel should be on the website as well
We use them every time we go away, never had any issues. But I only ever used the app and would never click a link in an email.
You are sure that's genuine? I use booking.com often without incident but normally the only choice is pay at the time of booking or pay the hotel on arrival. I have never seen a delayed payment option.Here's a snippet from a genuine booking.com message I received relating to a recent trip I took. They also included a link for payment and a cancellation warning.View attachment 177455
100% sure. I called them when i received the message since I was a bit paranoid from my previous experience. They confirmed it was legitimate and I then paid it. I stayed at the apartment and there were no problems. The only difference in the text between this message and the scam one was that this one included a booking.com pin code as well as a confirmation code whereas the scam one only included the confirmation code.You are sure that's genuine? I use booking.com often without incident but normally the only choice is pay at the time of booking or pay the hotel on arrival. I have never seen a delayed payment option.
Agoda are ok, but twice now they have cancelled the hotel on me at the last minute due to ‘overbooking’ and offered something not remotely comparable as an alternative. So I use them more sparingly ever since those incidents, figuring that once may have been unfortunate but twice suggests it’s a bit more than that.Used them weekly between 5-8 years ago without issue but am not working that pattern anymore. Will admit since then if I'm ever away I use Agoda instead. Not sure if that's big in Europe?
The thing I never understand about this stuff- how hard would it actually be to send one out that doesn't have mistakes in it? You only need to relatively competent English speaker to type the email. I don't understand how people can go through all the hassle and risk of creating the scam, and not even getting the wording right!
There's a theory to this stuff that the spelling and grammatical mistakes are entirely intentional because, when you're sending out a high volume of these things, you only want to engage with the gullible who don't notice detail.The thing I never understand about this stuff- how hard would it actually be to send one out that doesn't have mistakes in it? You only need to relatively competent English speaker to type the email. I don't understand how people can go through all the hassle and risk of creating the scam, and not even getting the wording right!