I tend not to receive this sort of thing but Rosie's Grandma does. I suspect that's because she uses social media which I avoid like the plague. Quick tip ... When you open the email you will see a little down arrow near the "from" field. Click this and you will see the full email address of the sender. In the case of Boots this should end in "boots.com". If it is from some obviously made up address eg [email protected] - report it and bin it. Also please be wary of emails that appear to come from a genuine address - the bad guys are getting smarter and can spoof the full email address shown in the from field. Golden rule of thumb: if you're not expecting it then it's probably dodgy. To be really safe, and if you've really nothing better to do, you can always pick up the phone and try to talk to a real human being at the alleged originator of the message eg Boots
Found out today, can't take it in
Well, that was a farce.........
