New Fake email

#0 - Oct. 23, 2010, 7:40 a.m.
Blizzard Post
Hello,

Blizzard Entertainment recently received a request to change the e-mail address used to log in to the Battle.net account with the username (Your email) The e-mail address (Other email) has been specified as the new username for this Battle.net account. An email has been sent to this new address containing a verification link to complete the change.

Once the new address has been verified, the e-mail address (Your email) can no longer be used to log in to this Battle.net account or any World of Warcraft accounts merged with this Battle.net account.

If you did not initiate this request, please click here to contact the Blizzard Billing & Account Services team immediately.

Sincerely,
The Battle.net Account Team
Online Privacy Policy

MessageID 4i0uotolvgjbgtxu3eopyhc
#3 - Oct. 23, 2010, 8:31 p.m.
Blizzard Post
Q u o t e:
MessageID 4i0uotolvgjbgtxu3eopyhc


Garbage like this in an email is almost always a sure tip-off of a bot generated phish.

The best way to determine the legitimacy of ANY email is to pop open the internal routing headers and see who really sent it. If it doesn't match the from address in the body - something's up. Indeed, that's the way a great many spam filters themselves work.