Top Tip here - regardless of legitimate or not, see if there is a telephone number and address and postcode on the website, Ring them, and checkout the postcode using royal mail.com. If your transaction is over £100 for one item, use a credit card - it gives you cover.
Computer Act!ve had a guide a while ago. See the link below about "Staying safe online".
Add this to what Sarah c has put and your a lot safer then most!
I speak from experience (unfortunately!) "it's good to talk"... when things go wrong.
2007-03-14 01:07:18
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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Open a cahoot account (internet arm of Abbey national). They allow you to generate one time use credit/debit card numbers with a maximum amount set by you. It is called a web card and it gives massive piece of mind when paying for services over the internet. You download a small application to your desktop and then just generate a new credit card number everytime you need one. I'm not sure why all the other banks aren't doing it.
2007-03-14 01:11:53
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answer #2
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answered by Declan 2
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Dan, only use your straightforward experience. it could to boot be a valid probability for $29.00 a month. Startrek only recommended you that he joined in Nov. 2007 and made his first sale purely some weeks in the past. That calculates 6 months making an investment $174.00 plus a good number of artwork and hours, making returned $207.00. what style of a employer is that? In any good pals software with appropriate guidance you ought to be making money your first actual month if no longer a week. a similar is going for Javier. undesirable soul has no longer made any money with GDI using fact it purely expenses $10.00 and he makes $a million.00 fee. what number purchasers does he ought to generate any significant earnings? and how plenty time and money he will ought to make investments to get those shoppers. the two a type of victims and thousands of others are construction somebody else's employer, no longer their very own. Are you heavily considering to run your individual employer? Then stay removed from construction somebody else's venture.
2016-11-25 19:18:16
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answer #3
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answered by ximenez 4
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1) Check your machine for spyware regularly.
2) Install MAcAffee Site Advisor and google for the business to get a rating.
http://www.siteadvisor.com
3) google for the company name and check the shopping forums, if you see a lot of complaints go somewhere else.
4) Make sure the site uses a secure payment method and the padlock icon is showing on your web browser.
5) Try to stick to well known sites where possible.
6) Pay by credit card and make sure you have payment protection and fraud protection , its usually on items over £100; but if the company goes bust you get your money back.
2007-03-14 00:47:24
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answer #4
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answered by sarah c 7
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you nessciarly it usually depends on the the payment details what they use.....also if they have a phone number or not. if they do you can call the company and actually talk to them....by doing so then if you have a problem you know you can reach them. if they don't have a number then it will be risky. there are some sites that don't have a number like amazon.com but i have ordered stuff through them with no problems.
2007-03-14 04:29:50
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answer #5
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answered by chef_05_85 2
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