Amazon Prime Customer Service For Prime Users

in amazon •  5 years ago 

Amazon prime is a leading shopping brand, it's a paid subscription service. It has several services to offer to the customers such as series, music, movies, and shopping as well. The application offers a free one-month subscription to its users based on the plan that one chooses. In 2018 Amazon prime had more than 100 million subscribers. The privileges of the account on amazon prime is enjoyed by any degree holder or a user who has an academic domain in their email address.

Amazon Prime Customer Service Number

With all the numerous facilities that Amazon Prime offers its users with, there are times when the users face difficulties in understanding them. The site provides with the best customer service with the other facilities. Whenever any customer faces any kind of issue or problem with the facility, he can contact Amazon Prime Customer Service Number and talk with the team. The experts are available to help the users at any given time and regarding any issue they face. Anything that you are not able to understand and are stuck with, the help desk is always available to help you through the Amazon prime customer service number.

Amazon prime customer service Number is available for prime membership customers. who can interact with the customer service team anytime?  The Amazon Prime offers an exclusive membership that gives its users the benefit of enjoying live streaming of videos, music, e-books and lot more other services that one can easily access by getting this amazing membership.

To use Amazon prime support number and you can talk to the team of experts to have desired solutions to your problems. The team is always present to have your query solved from having a membership by changing the plan. You will be guided step by step to the solution. The Amazon prime support is very user-friendly and knowledgeable.

 Amazon’s customer service backdoor

As a security conscious user who follows the best practices like: using unique passwords, 2FA, only using a secure computer and being able to spot phishing attacks from a mile away, I would have thought my accounts and details would be pretty safe? Wrong. Because when someone has gone after me, it all goes for nothing. That’s because most systems come with a backdoor, customer support. In this post I’m going to focus on the most grievous offender: Amazon.com Amazon.com was one of the few companies I trusted with my personal information. After all, I shop there, I used to work as a Software Developer and I am a heavy AWS user (raking up well over $600/month) It all began with a rather innocuous email:  

Weird, I didn’t contact Amazon support? At first, I assumed it might be a mistake or a delayed email from the time I contacted them months earlier. But curiosity got the better of me, and I contacted Amazon to ask what it was about. They told me that “I” had a conversation with Amazon support? What the hell? It was a text-chat, and they emailed me a transcript:  

Trying very hard to not take out my frustrations on an unrelated support rep, I contacted both Amazon Retail and AWS expressing my disappointment and asking them to put a note on my account that it is at extremely high risk of being social engineering, and I will always be capable of logging in. Amazon Retail said they would put a note, and have a specialist contact me (who never did) while AWS was dismissive of even a risk existing.Fast forward a couple of months, I made the big mistake of thinking the risk was gone, giving Amazon my fresh credit card and now new address details. I receive another email. I feel a pit of my stomach.

So once again, I contact Amazon support to see what happened. This time I had the pleasure of dealing with a support agent who seemed 100% incapable of realizing that someone was impersonating me. I had trouble keeping my composure when he told me I should change my password to prevent people impersonating me. Eventually I had to basically tell him that it was “me” that contacted support and I wanted “my” transcript, which he provided. 

Guess I should count my blessings they didn’t give the last digits of my credit card. I again contact Amazon to reiterate how important it is that they keep my account secure, and not give out my details to anyone with a name and address. They promise they’re putting a note on my account, and it’ll never happen again. And I will be contacted by a specialist (never happened, again)

This time I decide I can no longer trust Amazon with my address, and delete it from my account.

Fast forward another day: 

This time, I can’t get a transcript of the conversation. They contacted Amazon by phone, and they don’t have a recording to give me. I’m going to have to assume they got the last digits of my credit card, like they seem to be after.At this point, Amazon has completely betrayed my trust three times. I have done absolutely everything in my power to secure my account, but it’s hopeless. I am in the process of closing my Amazon account, and migrating as much to Google services which seem significantly more robust at stopping these attacks.After being the victim of these attacks for months, I’d like to make some recommendations for services:

  • NEVER DO CUSTOMER SUPPORT UNLESS THE USER CAN LOG IN TO THEIR ACCOUNT. The only exception to this, would be if the user forgot the password, and there should be a very strict policy. The problem is, 9999 times out of 10000 support requests are legitimate, agents get trained to assume they’re legitimate. But in the 1 case they’re not, you can completely fuck someone over.
  • Show support agents the ip address of the person connecting. Is it a usual one? Is it a VPN/tor one? etc. Give them a warning to be suspicious.
  • Email services should allow me to easily create lots of aliases. Right now the best defense against social engineering seems to be my fastmail account which allows me to create 1 email address alias per service. This makes it incredibly difficult for an attacker when they can’t even figure out your email.
  • Please make whois protection default. Mine leaked because a stupid domain I didn’t care about had its namecheap whois protection expire

For users, be extremely careful with the information you share. Even big companies like Amazon can’t keep it safe, they’re far from the worst. 


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