According to Taiwanese media reports, a female netizen collapsed and said that she had purchased goods online, but the seller had not shipped them at all, but the goods had arrived at the supermarket. Because it was cash on delivery, I had no doubt that he was there, so I took out 1,500 yuan (NT$, equivalent to about 348 yuan in RMB, the same below) to pick up the goods. Unexpectedly, when she opened the box at home, the original pillowcase turned into a vulgar gold chain. The painful lesson made her want to cry.
This female netizen revealed on " Facebook " that she recently bought a 1,500 yuan pillowcase on a shopping website. A few days later, the system clearly showed that "the seller has not shipped the goods", but the goods had arrived at the supermarket. The woman compared the amount with her name, so she quickly paid 1,500 yuan and took away the package. When the woman got home and unpacked the box, she was shocked. "When I picked it up, I found it was not a pillowcase, but a gold chain." After the
article was posted, many netizens speculated that the seller might have sent the wrong product. But after the woman peeled off the cocoon, she confirmed that this was a common fraud technique. First of all, after people place an order on the platform, the fraud group obtains personal information but does not ship the goods. Instead, it is sent from other logistics. Finally, the goods arrive at the supermarket, and then notify the buyer via text message that "the cash on delivery is collected by another company, and the money does not go through the platform at all."
This article also "fished out" many victims. Netizens left messages, "I bought this lucky bag before, please call the police"; "My husband was also defrauded, also for 1,500 yuan, but he bought Japanese cigarettes."
(edited by Schmoner)