![]() ![]() I demanded that they delete the account (Netflix doesn’t actually give you a way to do that - you can only stop the service and payment) and they did. They confirmed that the mail is real and that “someone” must have signed up using my e-mail address, and that I should just ignore it because the account doesn’t have any payment mechanism on file. We have a subscription, but it’s using my wife’s e-mail address, not mine. I got several e-mails from them claiming that I subscribed and need to go create a password and register payment. This reminds me a bit of the same thing from Netflix. But normally, such confirmation messages mean the address will later be dropped if there is no reply - which doesn’t seem to have happened here. If this isn’t a scam, then that mail is probably the result of someone providing your e-mail address and Lending Tree is asking for confirmation. One strike against Lending Tree is that the first message it sent asked me to confirm my email address I did not reply in any fashion, yet I continue to receive messages. ![]() In this case, I don’t really care, but it will make me more cautious about using On My Mac, even on Mojave. Attempts to copy a message that had the body missing back to the original server failed. I was able to copy a message that still displayed body contents back to a folder on the original server. ![]() I then chose View > Message > Raw Source the new window was empty. All Lending Tree messages from February and later still have the body contents.įor one message, I chose View > Message > All Headers all header information disappeared. All Lending Tree messages from January (that’s when they started arriving) have empty bodies. The three other messages, all older than the oldest Lending Tree message, still have information in the body. This morning, I received a Lending Tree message, and for no reason in particular, I opened an earlier message. I move said messages to this folder.) There are three messages from entities other than Lending Tree in this On My Mac folder. (Aside: I never even visited Lending Tree’s web site and I don’t know where it got my email address, but I get a message or two each month. In that folder, I have messages from Lending Tree. FWIW, this morning I saw what appeared to this problem in Mail Version 12.4 (3445.104.14) on macOS 10.14.6 (18G5033) Mojave. ![]()
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