✅ Scam Alert: Just received this fake $2,000,000 “donation” from “Philip Hampson Knight” (Nike co-founder)

This morning my inbox delivered a perfectly polished email claiming Phil Knight wants to give me $2M as part of his “giving while living” philosophy.
Spoiler: It’s 100% fake.

Here’s the reality check — and the red flags every professional should watch for in 2026:

The scam in 30 seconds
- Sender: [email protected] (a random Japanese ISP)
- Reply-To: [email protected] (free Gmail)
- Offer: Unsolicited $2,000,000 “personal donation” to a “randomly selected” stranger
- Classic follow-up: They’ll eventually ask for bank details or “processing fees”

What to look for in these fake-donation / impersonation emails:
- Domain mismatch – Real billionaires and foundations do NOT email from consumer ISPs or .jp addresses.
- Reply-To Gmail/Yahoo/Hotmail – Legitimate organizations use their own domain.
- Unsolicited windfall – No one randomly picks your email for millions. Ever.
- Pressure to “confirm quickly” + Wikipedia link as “proof.”
- Plain-text format with weird encoding (this one used Japanese iso-2022-jp to slip filters).

This exact script has been circulating for months using variations of Phil Knight’s name. It’s advance-fee fraud dressed in a billionaire suit.

Pro tip
- Never reply. Never click. Forward the full headers to your security team or [email protected] (US) / equivalent in your country. Then delete.
- Stay sharp out there — scammers are getting more creative, but the tells are still the same.

#Cybersecurity #ScamAlert #Phishing #EmailSecurity #DigitalSafety #LinkedInSecurity #StayVigilant