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solracivanna

Travelling Tokyo The Avanti Group Way: Travel Tips From Anthony Bourdain - 1 views

What if you found yourself next to CNN's rockstar travel documentarian Anthony Bourdain at a party? Obviously, you ask him where you should go on vacation this summer and shake him down for travel ...

Travelling Tokyo The Avanti Group Way

started by solracivanna on 20 Jul 14 no follow-up yet
blaketreece

Travel Review Tips by The Avanti Group: Holiday villa fraud that's hit countless Britis... - 1 views

You arrive at that dream villa to find the owner's never heard of you - and you sent your cash to a chillingly plausible conman For Chris and Annia Pegg, a two-week break in the South of France ev...

Travel Review Tips by The Avanti Group Holiday villa fraud that's hit countless British families

started by blaketreece on 12 Sep 14 no follow-up yet
solracivanna

Travel Review Tips by the Avanti Group: The New Hotel Wi-Fi Scam You Haven't Heard of Yet - 1 views

You choose a hotel because it advertises free Wi-Fi. But when you log on, you find the connection is agonizingly slow. "Aha," says the hotel. "You want high-speed, we'll give you high-speed-for ju...

Travel Review Tips by the Avanti Group

started by solracivanna on 17 Sep 14 no follow-up yet
blaketreece

The Avanti Group Inc - Ultimate Travel Guide Tokyo Hong Kong Malaysia on scams strategy... - 1 views

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    The Watchdog is still in vacation mode. I just got back from a family trip to Florida. We had a blast. This is the time of year when your mind may be on vacations, too. If you're looking ahead to a lazy summer trip, don't relax too much because unfortunately, scammers will hound you while you plan and even follow you on the road, too. The state attorney general's office recently warned about travel scams, a few of which were news to me. One involves pizza deliveries, of all things. Who hasn't had a craving for pizza after checking into a hotel in an unfamiliar city where you don't want to hunt for a decent place to chow down. You pick up the menu that's conveniently been slipped under your door and order away. The scam is that the menus have a phone number that connect with an identity thief, not a pizza parlor. You won't get your large pie, and the thief will live large by running up charges on the credit card you provided for payment. The attorney general's office recommends contacting the hotel's front desk or concierge for take-out suggestions. You also can look on your smartphone or in the phone book. Speaking of phones, if your hotel room phone rings in the middle of the night and the caller identifies himself as the front desk needing to verify your credit card, hang up.
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