First of all, beautiful paintings. Second of all, who sees a painting they want and then tries to scam the actual artist?

Usually you are excited to have a relationship with the artist. This is so opposite of how the connection to a piece of art should go.

And what do you say to a guest who compliments the painting on your wall? β€œThanks, I got it from an artist who I scammed. I sent them a fake PayPal payment.”

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This scammer only wanted my money, not my painting.

This is the pattern of the scam:

https://www.mailguard.com.au/blog/paypal-users-beware-fake-emails-claiming-your-account-has-been-limited-landing-in-inboxes

Ah, that makes more sense. My dad is 90 and still uses email. I have to monitor his inbox daily for scams - of which he gets about 3x a week.

Very hard for him to distinguish between real and scam emails.

The elderly are easy targets.

If only there was such a thing as karma.