Examiner les modifications individuelles

De Wiki Dofus
Navigation du filtre anti-abus (Accueil | Modifications récentes des filtres | Examiner les modifications précédentes | Journal anti-abus)
Aller à la navigationAller à la recherche

Cette page vous permet d’examiner les variables générées par le filtre anti-abus pour une modification individuelle et de les tester avec les filtres.

Variables générées pour cette modification

VariableValeur
Nom du compte de l’utilisateur (user_name)
'MarlysDecoteau'
ID de la page (page_id)
0
Espace de noms de la page (page_namespace)
0
Titre de la page (sans l’espace de noms) (page_title)
'A Couple Have Been Left Penniless After TV Licence Scammers Emptied Their Bank Accounts In A particularly Nasty Case Of Fraud'
Titre complet de la page (page_prefixedtitle)
'A Couple Have Been Left Penniless After TV Licence Scammers Emptied Their Bank Accounts In A particularly Nasty Case Of Fraud'
Action (action)
'edit'
Résumé/motif de la modification (summary)
''
Ancien modèle de contenu (old_content_model)
''
Nouveau modèle de contenu (new_content_model)
'wikitext'
Texte wiki de l’ancienne page, avant la modification (old_wikitext)
''
Texte wiki de la nouvelle page, après la modification (new_wikitext)
'A couple have been left [https://edition.cnn.com/search?q=penniless penniless] after TV licence scammers emptied their bank accounts in a 'particularly nasty' case of fraud.<br>Jerry Tack, 65, and his wife Carole, 61, had £4,000 stolen from two separate saving accounts, as well as £1,900 from his current account.<br> The couple, from Hampshire, [https://ccgood.best Good cc Shop] desperately tried to resolve the situation with their building society Nationwide only to be told they couldn't do anything because Mr Tack had willingly given his details.<br>The 65-year-old is one of 5,000 people who have been tricked into handing money over on the premise of a TV licence renew <br><br><br><br>Share this article<br>Share<br><br><br>The scammers, described as 'particularly nasty' by Action Fraud, use 'official-looking' emails with headlines such as 'correct your licensing information' and 'your TV licence expires today' in an attempt to convince targets to click on a link to a website. <br>The website then prompts them to add their payment details, including the Card Verification Value (CVV) code, account number and sort code.<br>The bogus web page may also ask for the victim's name, date of birth, address, phone number, email and even mother's maiden name. <br><div class="art-ins mol-factbox floatRHS news" data-version="2" id="mol-db79ce40-1299-11e9-8707-8f8cf2dcef54" website 65, loses £9,900 to TV licence scammers'
Horodatage Unix de la modification (timestamp)
1668369607