Announcements in Forum : Cartipping
Administrator




Joined: Aug 1999
Posts: 67,453
Likes: 1,973
From: Chattanooga, TN
CI 2-3-4-5-6-7-8-9-10-11-12
Wounded Warrior Escort '11
St. Jude Donor '03 thru '26
NCM Lifetime Member
NCM Sinkhole Donor
2026 C1 of the Year -- Enter Now
Proud of your C1 Corvette? Of course you are! Please enter for the chance to have community members vote for your car as 2026 C1 of the Year, unmodified or modified.
Unmodified:
https://www.corvetteforum.com/forums...enter-now.html
Modified:
https://www.corvetteforum.com/forums...enter-now.html
Unmodified:
https://www.corvetteforum.com/forums...enter-now.html
Modified:
https://www.corvetteforum.com/forums...enter-now.html
Administrator




Joined: Aug 1999
Posts: 67,453
Likes: 1,973
From: Chattanooga, TN
CI 2-3-4-5-6-7-8-9-10-11-12
Wounded Warrior Escort '11
St. Jude Donor '03 thru '26
NCM Lifetime Member
NCM Sinkhole Donor
Here's how to avoid scammers
Follow these suggestions to shield yourself from scammers:
*Don't let them take the transaction negotiations offline. If you do, you can't be certain you are dealing with the actual legitimate seller.
*Pay attention to details. The scammers are hoping you won't notice slight variations in spellings on the legitimate sellers' user ID.
*Be wary of sellers who have no track record of successful sales on the site.
*If you see a sale thread that interests you, PM the seller directly. Posting your interest in the sales thread is an invitation to scammers. Posting in the sale thread that you have PMed the seller also is an invitation for scammers to contact you.
*Don't post your personal contact information in an open thread, it just makes it easier for the scammers to scam you.
*If someone gives you contact information, check it against this sticky thread: https://www.corvetteforum.com/forums...formation.html
*Don't send money in a form that offers no protection if the deal goes bad.
*Don't let them take the transaction negotiations offline. If you do, you can't be certain you are dealing with the actual legitimate seller.
*Pay attention to details. The scammers are hoping you won't notice slight variations in spellings on the legitimate sellers' user ID.
*Be wary of sellers who have no track record of successful sales on the site.
*If you see a sale thread that interests you, PM the seller directly. Posting your interest in the sales thread is an invitation to scammers. Posting in the sale thread that you have PMed the seller also is an invitation for scammers to contact you.
*Don't post your personal contact information in an open thread, it just makes it easier for the scammers to scam you.
*If someone gives you contact information, check it against this sticky thread: https://www.corvetteforum.com/forums...formation.html
*Don't send money in a form that offers no protection if the deal goes bad.


