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Receive up to $504 promo credit ($180 w/Welcome Unlimited, $360 w/ 5G Start, or $504 w/5G Do More, 5G Play More, 5G Get More or One Unlimited for iPhone plan (Welcome Unlimited and One Unlimited for iPhone plans can't be mixed w/other Unlimited plans; all lines on the account req'd on respective plans)) when you add a new smartphone line with your own 4G/5G smartphone on an eligible postpaid plan between 2/10/23 and 4/5/23. Promo credit applied over 36 months; promo credits end if eligibility requirements are no longer met.
$699.99 (128 GB only) device payment purchase or full retail purchase w/ new smartphone line on One Unlimited for iPhone (all lines on account req'd on plan), 5G Start, 5G Do More, 5G Play More or 5G Get More plan req'd. Less $699.99 promo credit applied over 36 mos.; promo credit ends if eligibility req’s are no longer met; 0% APR.
I received an e-mail at my verizon.net address that looks like a scam. It contains an attachment that I don't trust. Is there somewhere I can report this to Verizon so they can take more action to investigate this e-mail for malware.
I didn't download this e-mail or its attachment to my computer. It's residing in the computer of the folks who provide my in box.
Either Verizon or Yahoo should be able to take a look at it easily if they want to. I'm not seeking help for myself. I want to report this as a public service.
There's always the chance that I'm falsely accusing someone who sent an innocuous e-mail.
Forward it to abuse@verizon.net if you want it investigated.
Forward it to spamdetector.notcaught@verizon.net if you think it should have been blocked as spam.
Either way, you probably will not get a response.
If you want to test for malware locally, run a malware/virus/spyware scan on it with whatever security software you have available.