Beware of Fraudulent Emails Impersonating Our Company and Employees!
We sincerely appreciate your continued support and patronage.
We have confirmed that fraudulent “spoofed emails” falsely using our company name and employee names are being sent without authorization.
We sincerely apologize for the inconvenience and concern caused to everyone who received these emails.
If you receive an email appearing to be from our company that seems suspicious, unfamiliar, or unrelated to our business, please do not open any attachments or click any links in the message, as doing so may pose risks such as virus infection or unauthorized access. We kindly ask that you delete the email immediately.
Main Characteristics Commonly Found in Fraudulent Emails
- Examples of suspicious email subject lines include: “Recipient Name,” “Regarding the Invoice,” “Request for Invoice Submission,” “Schedule Sharing Notification,” “Regarding the Quotation,” “Regarding Crane Arrangement,” and “Notice About Using Plain Text Email.”
- The sender’s email address uses a domain other than “nippon-salvage.co.jp”.
- The email signature may also be falsified to display our company name, employee names, and company email addresses.
Please note that emails from our company are sent only from the domain listed below. We kindly ask you to verify the sender’s address carefully.
XXXXX.XXXXX@nippon-salvage.co.jp
XXXXX.XXXXX@ams-grp.net
If you receive an email sent from a domain other than those listed above, please do not open any attachments (especially Word or TXT files), as doing so may result in virus infection or the spread of malware across internal networks and systems.
How to Identify Spoofed Emails
*The sender name may appear legitimate, but the actual sending domain differs from our company’s official domain.
Example of a Spoofed Email:
From:社員名<******@meiwaku.com>

