Amazon customers report false email confirmations for gift cards they did not buy


Amazon customer service representatives this weekend have been handling a wave of inquiries from customers who received suspicious and confusing email confirmations about gift card purchases they had not made.

Customers on social media said they were sent three consecutive emails, some Saturday night and others Sunday morning, thanking them for their purchases of Google Play, Mastercard and Hotels.com gift cards, despite never having bought them.

An Amazon customer service representative said that the company is looking into the cause of the faulty emails, but that accounts are safe and customers can ignore the messages.

“Dear Amazon customer,” one of the emails read. “Thank you for purchasing Google Play gift cards from Amazon.com.”

The Amazon emails also contained a warning against gift card scams: “There are a variety of scams in which fraudsters try to trick others into paying with gift cards from well-known brands.”
The messages left customers puzzled and alarmed that a hacker may have obtained access to their financial information and bought those gift cards.

“Thanks for the early AM heart attack Amazon. Who needs caffeine?” one user wrote in a Facebook post after receiving the faulty emails.

One Amazon customer service representative on Sunday morning said the company received three calls in a row about the email issue. The automated customer service bot said that there were “longer than normal wait times” in the phone queue.

“So far, we don’t have any further information concerning the message, but rest assured that we are working on getting to the cause,” said another customer service representative. “I’m really sorry to all those customers who received this kind of email and that this caused them alarm. But rest assured that every account here is safe and in the meantime, we can just inform them to just disregard the message.”

One Reddit user said that an Amazon representative explained the mishap as “poorly worded emails intended to warn customers about potential scams.”

A spokesperson for Amazon did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

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