Agents who received a letter, supposedly from Rightmove, have been told it is a scam – but that Rightmove’s site security was not breached.
The email was headed “Rightmove Account Closing” and was from an Ian Warder.
It said that a complaint had been received about “your ads promoted on Rightmove” and went on: “We are requested to stop publishing your ads if this complaint is not solve [sic].”
An attachment supposedly gave details of the complaint.
Mysteriously, Eye was among those receiving the emails.
A spokesperson for Rightmove told us: “We are aware that a small number of agents have received bogus emails purporting to be from Rightmove.
“These emails are not from Rightmove and we have communicated with all of our customers, advising anyone who receives one to delete it immediately.
“We have comprehensive security measures in place and there is no evidence that our security has been compromised.
“We also have information on our site offering advice to people about how to remain vigilant online.
“There is no one at Rightmove called Ian Warder and we do not have an Account Closing Department.”

Comments (5)
interview them, and either put the interview
in it’s entirety as a post or break it up into several posts. run a contest. conduct a poll. use a guest blogger. this is one of the easiest ways to ignore “writer’s block.” get someone else to blog for you!
<strong>engines, but for the bulk of searches</strong>
it does not help much.but, aside from not being a help, if you strung together a load of keywords and buy a url based on them and then use that as your blog's title, it can look a mess. especially if
<strong>making a plan that ought to include</strong>
the people, the purpose, and the start date.ii) make a plan to measure the effects of the blog.iii) keep a marketing plan ready with detailed maneuvers as to how the company will promote the blog. try to know if your company
roysia – “…I’d already cancelled my membership with them some months before, in protest at their exorbitant fees!”
SO… tell us more. Several months down the line – no RM – how are you finding things?
I got the scam email – I knew it was a scam as I’d already cancelled my membership with them some months before, in protest at their exorbitant fees! Presumably however the scammers couldn’t have obtained my email address by hacking into Rightmove as I was no longer a member??