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Is this a scam?

How is this for a story ? Anyone here had a similar experience ?

Booking.com demanded an extra €5,000 for our villa

Many months after we made the original booking, the website demanded the extra amount
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Our correspondent felt Booking.com was trying to take advantage of a surge in demand. Photograph: Dado Ruvić/Reuters

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Anna Tims
Wed 4 May 2022 07.00 BSTLast modified on Wed 4 May 2022 07.01 BST

https://www.theguardian.com/money/2...demanded-an-extra-5000-for-our-villa#comments
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Last May, 12 of us used Booking.com to rent a Greek villa for a fortnight in August. We paid the €4,435 cost in full and booked flights and hire cars. Recently Booking.com informed us that there had been a pricing error and the actual cost was €9,407. We were told that we must pay the difference or it would cancel the reservation. It is already re-advertising the villa for the dates we have booked. We feel that it is trying to take advantage of increasing demand for holidays at our expense.

PJ, Stockport
Booking.com holds customers to strict terms and conditions when it comes to cancellations, but scuppers holidays itself without penalty. Last year, I reported on a family who arrived for their spa holiday in Cornwall to find the company had transferred their booking to the London suburb of Uxbridge. Your experience is similarly breathtaking in its audacity. The curt email from Booking.com arrived 11 months after your booking and gave you 24 hours to pay the extra. It stated that the villa owner wished to find “middle ground” and would reduce the new €9,400 price by €200. It added, graciously, that if you did not want to accept the offer it would cancel your booking “for free”. The company’s terms and conditions state that obvious errors, such as a €1 hotel suite, are not binding. If the €4,435 price was an “obvious error”, you’d expect the owner to have noticed last year. If it were not, you should have been able to rely on another clause in the terms and conditions which state that your payment constitutes “final settlement of the due and payable service”.

In the event, Booking.com cancelled and refunded your reservation while you were still discussing what to do. You and your family have now been left nearly €3,000 out of pocket after paying for alternative accommodation and rearranging flights and car hire.

I repeatedly asked Booking.com whether owners were required to sign cancellation terms so that customers could be confident that they would get what they paid for. It said evasively that it works “collaboratively” with owners who are responsible for pricing and availability and that it supports customers when errors occur. “We can see that in this instance it was an error on the part of the villa and are investigating why this occurred to make sure it does not happen again,” it said.

Scandalously, the story would have ended there if you hadn’t asked me to investigate. Only then did the company agree to refund the €2,930 costs of rearranging the holiday. Booking.com’s terms and conditions state that it handles all complaints internally and is not obliged to submit to alternative dispute resolution providers so, had it refused to compensate, your next step would have been a claim for your expenses via the small claims court.

 
That story stinks. Booking.com seem to be quite an unscrupulous organisation.

I've used them in the past and been stung by overseas transaction costs on my credit card when the charge went through Amsterdam or somewhere without any indication from Booking.com that this would happen.

I don't book through them now.
 
Scam alert: Something new (for me).
Received email purporting to be from myGov alerting me to apply for refund of 436.98 AUD.

Email uses similar colours to the myGov site. Reading the other sentences in the email you can tell it's a scam.
 
The scammers are getting much better. A very scary story on the ABC of how a businesswoman was tricked into clicking a Google Bank ad link. Well worth reading closely.

From text messages to fraudulent ads, how scammers are draining bank accounts

7.30
/ By Hannah Bowers and Alex McDonald
Posted 2h ago2 hours ago
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Helen Cahill accidentally entered her login details onto a bogus bank website.(ABC News: Kyle Harley)
Help keep family & friends informed by sharing this article

Key points:​

  • Helen Cahill mistakenly logged into a fake Bendigo Bank website and had $30,000 stolen
  • There have been more than 35,000 reported attempts to gain the personal information of Australians since January
  • Scam victims are encouraged not to be embarrassed and to report it quickly

In the 25 years Helen Cahill has kept the books for her small business near Melbourne Airport, she's never had any trouble doing online banking.

So on a particularly busy afternoon on May 26, when she sat down at her desk, she thought it was strange it was taking so long to log in.
She'd googled "Bendigo Bank" and clicked on the first link that came up, which was a Google ad for the bank.

She then keyed in her login details, including a two-factor authentication pin.

What Ms Cahill soon discovered was that she had clicked on a malicious advertisement instead of the Bendigo Bank website, and that a scammer had gained access to her account.

"It was probably within two minutes that I logged onto the genuine Bendigo Bank … and realised that $30,000 had been taken from my account," Ms Cahill told 7.30.
"I just felt really violated … I thought, 'How can that happen?' I really feel like I'm a very cautious, careful person when I'm doing banking."


 
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