A stranger asks for my delivery address, how much information should I give?











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There's this person online with whom I have only interacted a few times. They had asked me for a small favour, which I did. They then wanted to give me something in return as a thank you. They were going to post it, so they wanted my address.



I am countries away and I'm not used to mail, especially international mail. I hate that I'm paranoid like this when I genuinely look forward to their gift, but I need to know to what extent do I share my details?










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  • 4




    What was the favour and what is the gift?
    – Revetahw
    yesterday






  • 3




    The more likely scam would be that they ask you to cover the delivery cost (and never send you anything), or they "accidentally" send you too much and ask you to pay the difference, or it's a delivery-man scam (which would be avoided by not accepting the delivery in person), or one of countless other scams that might build on the rapport you have.
    – NotThatGuy
    yesterday








  • 2




    You could look at mailbox services. E. G. accessstorage.com/business-services/mailboxes (I've no personal experienxe with this specific one, just my first google result)
    – JohnLBevan
    23 hours ago






  • 2




    There are a lot of "identify this possible scam" requests on money.stackexchange.com. personally, I would have asked this one over there, but ymmv
    – Mawg
    21 hours ago






  • 4




    Someone is offering a disproportionate reward for a small favour. If it is not a scam, saying "no need to repay me, happy to help" is a kind and generous response. If it is a scam, the same response protects you from an appeal to greed. See @ccto response.
    – Ben
    20 hours ago















up vote
36
down vote

favorite
5












There's this person online with whom I have only interacted a few times. They had asked me for a small favour, which I did. They then wanted to give me something in return as a thank you. They were going to post it, so they wanted my address.



I am countries away and I'm not used to mail, especially international mail. I hate that I'm paranoid like this when I genuinely look forward to their gift, but I need to know to what extent do I share my details?










share|improve this question









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  • 4




    What was the favour and what is the gift?
    – Revetahw
    yesterday






  • 3




    The more likely scam would be that they ask you to cover the delivery cost (and never send you anything), or they "accidentally" send you too much and ask you to pay the difference, or it's a delivery-man scam (which would be avoided by not accepting the delivery in person), or one of countless other scams that might build on the rapport you have.
    – NotThatGuy
    yesterday








  • 2




    You could look at mailbox services. E. G. accessstorage.com/business-services/mailboxes (I've no personal experienxe with this specific one, just my first google result)
    – JohnLBevan
    23 hours ago






  • 2




    There are a lot of "identify this possible scam" requests on money.stackexchange.com. personally, I would have asked this one over there, but ymmv
    – Mawg
    21 hours ago






  • 4




    Someone is offering a disproportionate reward for a small favour. If it is not a scam, saying "no need to repay me, happy to help" is a kind and generous response. If it is a scam, the same response protects you from an appeal to greed. See @ccto response.
    – Ben
    20 hours ago













up vote
36
down vote

favorite
5









up vote
36
down vote

favorite
5






5





There's this person online with whom I have only interacted a few times. They had asked me for a small favour, which I did. They then wanted to give me something in return as a thank you. They were going to post it, so they wanted my address.



I am countries away and I'm not used to mail, especially international mail. I hate that I'm paranoid like this when I genuinely look forward to their gift, but I need to know to what extent do I share my details?










share|improve this question









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cluelessAndDesperate is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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There's this person online with whom I have only interacted a few times. They had asked me for a small favour, which I did. They then wanted to give me something in return as a thank you. They were going to post it, so they wanted my address.



I am countries away and I'm not used to mail, especially international mail. I hate that I'm paranoid like this when I genuinely look forward to their gift, but I need to know to what extent do I share my details?







privacy






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edited yesterday









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  • 4




    What was the favour and what is the gift?
    – Revetahw
    yesterday






  • 3




    The more likely scam would be that they ask you to cover the delivery cost (and never send you anything), or they "accidentally" send you too much and ask you to pay the difference, or it's a delivery-man scam (which would be avoided by not accepting the delivery in person), or one of countless other scams that might build on the rapport you have.
    – NotThatGuy
    yesterday








  • 2




    You could look at mailbox services. E. G. accessstorage.com/business-services/mailboxes (I've no personal experienxe with this specific one, just my first google result)
    – JohnLBevan
    23 hours ago






  • 2




    There are a lot of "identify this possible scam" requests on money.stackexchange.com. personally, I would have asked this one over there, but ymmv
    – Mawg
    21 hours ago






  • 4




    Someone is offering a disproportionate reward for a small favour. If it is not a scam, saying "no need to repay me, happy to help" is a kind and generous response. If it is a scam, the same response protects you from an appeal to greed. See @ccto response.
    – Ben
    20 hours ago














  • 4




    What was the favour and what is the gift?
    – Revetahw
    yesterday






  • 3




    The more likely scam would be that they ask you to cover the delivery cost (and never send you anything), or they "accidentally" send you too much and ask you to pay the difference, or it's a delivery-man scam (which would be avoided by not accepting the delivery in person), or one of countless other scams that might build on the rapport you have.
    – NotThatGuy
    yesterday








  • 2




    You could look at mailbox services. E. G. accessstorage.com/business-services/mailboxes (I've no personal experienxe with this specific one, just my first google result)
    – JohnLBevan
    23 hours ago






  • 2




    There are a lot of "identify this possible scam" requests on money.stackexchange.com. personally, I would have asked this one over there, but ymmv
    – Mawg
    21 hours ago






  • 4




    Someone is offering a disproportionate reward for a small favour. If it is not a scam, saying "no need to repay me, happy to help" is a kind and generous response. If it is a scam, the same response protects you from an appeal to greed. See @ccto response.
    – Ben
    20 hours ago








4




4




What was the favour and what is the gift?
– Revetahw
yesterday




What was the favour and what is the gift?
– Revetahw
yesterday




3




3




The more likely scam would be that they ask you to cover the delivery cost (and never send you anything), or they "accidentally" send you too much and ask you to pay the difference, or it's a delivery-man scam (which would be avoided by not accepting the delivery in person), or one of countless other scams that might build on the rapport you have.
– NotThatGuy
yesterday






The more likely scam would be that they ask you to cover the delivery cost (and never send you anything), or they "accidentally" send you too much and ask you to pay the difference, or it's a delivery-man scam (which would be avoided by not accepting the delivery in person), or one of countless other scams that might build on the rapport you have.
– NotThatGuy
yesterday






2




2




You could look at mailbox services. E. G. accessstorage.com/business-services/mailboxes (I've no personal experienxe with this specific one, just my first google result)
– JohnLBevan
23 hours ago




You could look at mailbox services. E. G. accessstorage.com/business-services/mailboxes (I've no personal experienxe with this specific one, just my first google result)
– JohnLBevan
23 hours ago




2




2




There are a lot of "identify this possible scam" requests on money.stackexchange.com. personally, I would have asked this one over there, but ymmv
– Mawg
21 hours ago




There are a lot of "identify this possible scam" requests on money.stackexchange.com. personally, I would have asked this one over there, but ymmv
– Mawg
21 hours ago




4




4




Someone is offering a disproportionate reward for a small favour. If it is not a scam, saying "no need to repay me, happy to help" is a kind and generous response. If it is a scam, the same response protects you from an appeal to greed. See @ccto response.
– Ben
20 hours ago




Someone is offering a disproportionate reward for a small favour. If it is not a scam, saying "no need to repay me, happy to help" is a kind and generous response. If it is a scam, the same response protects you from an appeal to greed. See @ccto response.
– Ben
20 hours ago










8 Answers
8






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up vote
66
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In the end, it all comes down to trust and risk. How much do you trust this person and how much do you want to give as far as details goes, what can someone do to harm you when they have your data? That you're asking here tells me you're not really sure if you can trust this person. There are risks involved (such as real life threats or maybe a possible scam) but it is not easy to identify risks without knowing the full situation, as you explained it rather vaguely.



To me the whole situation sounds kinda phishy to be honest. Are you sure you didn't fall for a phishing or scam attempt by helping this other person?



Most countries do have PO boxes and other rent-able post solutions such as Poste Restante (as suggested by Molot in the comments) so you don't have to give out your own personal details.






share|improve this answer



















  • 13




    "In the end, it all comes down to trust. How much do you trust this person" It's beyond that - in the end, it all comes down to risk. How much wreckage could this person create with this trust.
    – Beanluc
    yesterday






  • 11




    +1, but don't forget Poste Restante - it is free, in some areas even more available than boxes, and offer similar protection to PO box, you only reveal general area where you live, or post office that's convenient for you. And this does not even have to be post office near your home, depending on country you may be able to select one near your work or at arbitrary address, or it may be one post office available for poste restante in whole city. Sender will not know anything more than the fact you can drive to this particular office.
    – Mołot
    21 hours ago








  • 1




    Or you could have it sent to your office, if this is something which is allowed/common where you live.
    – WoJ
    21 hours ago






  • 1




    @WoJ exposing where you work is arguably more risky, as it gives a fast and easy way for blackmail "Do what I want or I send ___ to your employer".
    – Mołot
    21 hours ago






  • 1




    @Mołot: maybe. This really depends on the risk context ("I do not want the guy to know where I live so that I am not robbed" vs. your example)
    – WoJ
    21 hours ago


















up vote
43
down vote













Many countries' postal systems have general delivery by which you can receive a package held at a post office for you to pick up, without having to give the sender an address. This might be an option for you.



In order for anyone else to assess how risky the situation is, I think you need to elaborate more on your relationship with the sender and the favor you performed for them. The vague way you've stated it is a big red flag for scams, involvement in money laundering, etc. but it may be that you've just poorly stated the situation out of a wish for privacy. At the very least though you should mention (or at least reflect upon for yourself) whether you had any relationship with the person prior to their asking you for a favor and whether you expected to be compensated in any way for the favor.






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  • Short of renting a PO box at the post office, this is the best option, the disadvantage being that you will not receive notification of reception, you just have to check in with the post office until it gets there.
    – Drunken Code Monkey
    yesterday






  • 5




    @DrunkenCodeMonkey Depends on the country and system. For example Australia Post now offers a "Parcel Collect" option which is effectively a form of Poste Restante with notifications (when addressed with a customer number you sign up for). Check what your local postal services offer.
    – Bob
    yesterday










  • @DrunkenCodeMonkey Agreeing with Bob. In Germany we also have the option to receive SMS or eMail notifications upon receiving mail which was delivered to a post office.
    – GxTruth
    15 hours ago


















up vote
8
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The whole favour thing--which they initiated--sounds rather like a setup aimed at getting your personal info. So I would recommend being very cautious here, and graciously declining their offer. Ask them to "pass it on" or "pay it forward" or something. The more they demand to get your info, the more suspicious you have a right to be.






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  • 6




    "Pay it forward" great advice. Just because I do a favour for a stranger, doesn't mean I now have to trust that stranger. It's called a confidence trick, not because I give the trickster my confidence, but because he gives me his. He asks me for a favour, to make me trust him.
    – Ben
    20 hours ago




















up vote
8
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Depending on the country you are in, your physical address is enough to do quite a lot of damage, or at least cause a huge amount of nuisance. Common examples:




  • An antagonist using your address to order delivery of unwanted, pay-on-delivery things (pizzas being the canonical example, but I've also been subject to Internet pranksters sending evangelicals to my home to try to convert me)

  • Being "doxed" and have your private information put online for stalkers/harassers to take advantage of

  • In the US, Swatting, which has resulted in deaths and significant property damage

  • Your address can also be used to socially-engineer others into e.g. giving up other identifying information, seizing domain names, or making you an unwitting part of a "lost delivery" or "brushing" scam


So you are probably right to limit sharing your mailing address to people you don't know if you can trust with the information.



As other answers have stated, you can minimize your exposure by using a PO box or similar; you may also be able to find mail hold-and-forward facilities that can handle individual pieces of mail or parcels (which usually charge by the piece of mail and whatever additional handling is necessary for the forwarding itself); this can be much more convenient to you than a PO box, as well as less costly overall since you don't need to rent it on a monthly basis.






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    up vote
    3
    down vote













    Just giving out the address is no problem, as long as you limit it to the address. Don't you have phone directories "white pages" or similar where you live?



    Think about it, hundreds of people probably have your home address. Of course, any of them could send you something illegal, immoral etc but as long as you act reasonably (E.g., you open an envelope and there is something that looks like drugs in, as long as you immediately call the police and you live in a reasonable country, nothing will happen to you. Rather, you will be greeted as some local hero if some local paper hears of the story.) there won't be any problems.



    Same goes for this situation.






    share|improve this answer

















    • 4




      Downvoted because in my opinion (and as explained in other answers below) there are risks involved.
      – Kevin Voorn
      20 hours ago










    • Give three examples of where people have got into trouble after ONLY giving out their postal address and where sending this information to an outsider was the culprit.
      – d-b
      20 hours ago






    • 2




      Read the answer of fluffy down below for some possible risks. I'd like to add postal fraud to that as seen in the answer that Lithilion gave, which is a common thing in the Netherlands to do for example.
      – Kevin Voorn
      20 hours ago






    • 1




      @d-b even if an address associated with a name itself were not in any way misusable by a motivated player, we still don't know what other information that person already has from other sources about OP, so handing out the address might only be one further puzzle piece they require to achieve their nefarious goals. Not saying there is anything nefarious going on though, to gauge that is ultimately up to OP.
      – Darkwing
      14 hours ago






    • 1




      I live in 2018 so I haven't seen a "white pages" in at least a decade
      – Azor Ahai
      14 hours ago


















    up vote
    2
    down vote













    Be careful about personal information. There was a crime in Austria reported some days ago, where people ordered stuff online to some strangers addresses and then redirected it through an app from the delivery service. Of course they never paid anything but the strangers got payment reminders.



    I've got a news article about this, but unfortunately only in german. (Try a translater): https://wien.orf.at/news/stories/2948455/






    share|improve this answer








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      up vote
      -1
      down vote













      In the UK, Belgium and Holland, most corner shops are part of one or more logistics networks, and hence drop-off points for senders; with many also pickup points. Often (via say Amazon.UK or Bol.com etc) you can choose them as destination from webshops. These same networks should fit in the chain that gets the package to you.



      It's a very reasonable idea to tell the sender: You'll be out at work (though I use my work address for such, which has a receptionist!) so would hate to miss the gift. So go to the cornershop where they know you by sight or name, ask if you can get it delivered in your name ["A.E. Neumann, C/O The Corner Shop, 12 High Street, Mummerset"] there. This doesn't unload the risk onto them, as its your name and their location so not relevant to any bank account or so.



      But consider they might find your real address even then. E.g., in the UK, I was surprised when googling my name for free it clearly hints my longterm partners (several addresses shared over time; precise up to city quarter if not paying for the data; a mixture of Electoral roll data before opting out, and other sources).



      I wouldn't judge this approach risky; in the real world there's thousands of instances where your details have been taken at a higher risk. I once got one UK parking fine (escalated over months of non-paying) while not owning a car, having no driving license, nor living (nor having lived) in the country; somebody had declared to the parking attendant that it was my car, and passed my details (collected from a B&B guest registration years before, in another country, because very very specifically misspelled)! Of course in ID-card-less UK there's no trace of the original declarant (I bet the then-owner), and I think no legal way for an individual like me to find the car owner's info from their numberplate. To get the bailiffs off eventually took months, hours of paperwork, various registered letters, and a statement from the DVLA (the UK "DMV") that I wasn't the owner.






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      • 2




        What does this add to the other 6 answers?
        – Tom K.
        17 hours ago










      • You can find the registered keeper's name and address from DVLA provided you have "reasonable cause": gov.uk/government/publications/…
        – Martin Bonner
        16 hours ago


















      up vote
      -2
      down vote













      I do not know where you meet that person or what kind of relationship you two have, it does sound a little bit weird to ask for your personal address if you are just begining your relationship. I personally do not think that giving your address posses a terrible risk, it is usually fairly easy to access this data and unless the person is determined to damaged you (i.e. if you had a bad argument or any other cause) I would not think that we wants to swat you for free, for example.



      Ask for a tracking number, the only problem would be if this person contacts you asking you to pay some taxes/wages because of a problem with the package... the story reminds me a litte bit of a common Tinder scam (military romace scam: http://www.cid.army.mil/romancescam.html).



      EDIT: As @Kevin says, of course it can be a risk to share your address with someone you do not trust to the point that you think he is able to do you some serious damage utilizing your address.






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      • 1




        Downvoted because in my opinion (and as explained in other answers below) there are risks involved.
        – Kevin Voorn
        20 hours ago










      • Thanks for the comment, Kevin!
        – Rocío García Luque
        13 hours ago











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      8 Answers
      8






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      8 Answers
      8






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      up vote
      66
      down vote













      In the end, it all comes down to trust and risk. How much do you trust this person and how much do you want to give as far as details goes, what can someone do to harm you when they have your data? That you're asking here tells me you're not really sure if you can trust this person. There are risks involved (such as real life threats or maybe a possible scam) but it is not easy to identify risks without knowing the full situation, as you explained it rather vaguely.



      To me the whole situation sounds kinda phishy to be honest. Are you sure you didn't fall for a phishing or scam attempt by helping this other person?



      Most countries do have PO boxes and other rent-able post solutions such as Poste Restante (as suggested by Molot in the comments) so you don't have to give out your own personal details.






      share|improve this answer



















      • 13




        "In the end, it all comes down to trust. How much do you trust this person" It's beyond that - in the end, it all comes down to risk. How much wreckage could this person create with this trust.
        – Beanluc
        yesterday






      • 11




        +1, but don't forget Poste Restante - it is free, in some areas even more available than boxes, and offer similar protection to PO box, you only reveal general area where you live, or post office that's convenient for you. And this does not even have to be post office near your home, depending on country you may be able to select one near your work or at arbitrary address, or it may be one post office available for poste restante in whole city. Sender will not know anything more than the fact you can drive to this particular office.
        – Mołot
        21 hours ago








      • 1




        Or you could have it sent to your office, if this is something which is allowed/common where you live.
        – WoJ
        21 hours ago






      • 1




        @WoJ exposing where you work is arguably more risky, as it gives a fast and easy way for blackmail "Do what I want or I send ___ to your employer".
        – Mołot
        21 hours ago






      • 1




        @Mołot: maybe. This really depends on the risk context ("I do not want the guy to know where I live so that I am not robbed" vs. your example)
        – WoJ
        21 hours ago















      up vote
      66
      down vote













      In the end, it all comes down to trust and risk. How much do you trust this person and how much do you want to give as far as details goes, what can someone do to harm you when they have your data? That you're asking here tells me you're not really sure if you can trust this person. There are risks involved (such as real life threats or maybe a possible scam) but it is not easy to identify risks without knowing the full situation, as you explained it rather vaguely.



      To me the whole situation sounds kinda phishy to be honest. Are you sure you didn't fall for a phishing or scam attempt by helping this other person?



      Most countries do have PO boxes and other rent-able post solutions such as Poste Restante (as suggested by Molot in the comments) so you don't have to give out your own personal details.






      share|improve this answer



















      • 13




        "In the end, it all comes down to trust. How much do you trust this person" It's beyond that - in the end, it all comes down to risk. How much wreckage could this person create with this trust.
        – Beanluc
        yesterday






      • 11




        +1, but don't forget Poste Restante - it is free, in some areas even more available than boxes, and offer similar protection to PO box, you only reveal general area where you live, or post office that's convenient for you. And this does not even have to be post office near your home, depending on country you may be able to select one near your work or at arbitrary address, or it may be one post office available for poste restante in whole city. Sender will not know anything more than the fact you can drive to this particular office.
        – Mołot
        21 hours ago








      • 1




        Or you could have it sent to your office, if this is something which is allowed/common where you live.
        – WoJ
        21 hours ago






      • 1




        @WoJ exposing where you work is arguably more risky, as it gives a fast and easy way for blackmail "Do what I want or I send ___ to your employer".
        – Mołot
        21 hours ago






      • 1




        @Mołot: maybe. This really depends on the risk context ("I do not want the guy to know where I live so that I am not robbed" vs. your example)
        – WoJ
        21 hours ago













      up vote
      66
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      up vote
      66
      down vote









      In the end, it all comes down to trust and risk. How much do you trust this person and how much do you want to give as far as details goes, what can someone do to harm you when they have your data? That you're asking here tells me you're not really sure if you can trust this person. There are risks involved (such as real life threats or maybe a possible scam) but it is not easy to identify risks without knowing the full situation, as you explained it rather vaguely.



      To me the whole situation sounds kinda phishy to be honest. Are you sure you didn't fall for a phishing or scam attempt by helping this other person?



      Most countries do have PO boxes and other rent-able post solutions such as Poste Restante (as suggested by Molot in the comments) so you don't have to give out your own personal details.






      share|improve this answer














      In the end, it all comes down to trust and risk. How much do you trust this person and how much do you want to give as far as details goes, what can someone do to harm you when they have your data? That you're asking here tells me you're not really sure if you can trust this person. There are risks involved (such as real life threats or maybe a possible scam) but it is not easy to identify risks without knowing the full situation, as you explained it rather vaguely.



      To me the whole situation sounds kinda phishy to be honest. Are you sure you didn't fall for a phishing or scam attempt by helping this other person?



      Most countries do have PO boxes and other rent-able post solutions such as Poste Restante (as suggested by Molot in the comments) so you don't have to give out your own personal details.







      share|improve this answer














      share|improve this answer



      share|improve this answer








      edited 20 hours ago

























      answered yesterday









      Kevin Voorn

      838415




      838415








      • 13




        "In the end, it all comes down to trust. How much do you trust this person" It's beyond that - in the end, it all comes down to risk. How much wreckage could this person create with this trust.
        – Beanluc
        yesterday






      • 11




        +1, but don't forget Poste Restante - it is free, in some areas even more available than boxes, and offer similar protection to PO box, you only reveal general area where you live, or post office that's convenient for you. And this does not even have to be post office near your home, depending on country you may be able to select one near your work or at arbitrary address, or it may be one post office available for poste restante in whole city. Sender will not know anything more than the fact you can drive to this particular office.
        – Mołot
        21 hours ago








      • 1




        Or you could have it sent to your office, if this is something which is allowed/common where you live.
        – WoJ
        21 hours ago






      • 1




        @WoJ exposing where you work is arguably more risky, as it gives a fast and easy way for blackmail "Do what I want or I send ___ to your employer".
        – Mołot
        21 hours ago






      • 1




        @Mołot: maybe. This really depends on the risk context ("I do not want the guy to know where I live so that I am not robbed" vs. your example)
        – WoJ
        21 hours ago














      • 13




        "In the end, it all comes down to trust. How much do you trust this person" It's beyond that - in the end, it all comes down to risk. How much wreckage could this person create with this trust.
        – Beanluc
        yesterday






      • 11




        +1, but don't forget Poste Restante - it is free, in some areas even more available than boxes, and offer similar protection to PO box, you only reveal general area where you live, or post office that's convenient for you. And this does not even have to be post office near your home, depending on country you may be able to select one near your work or at arbitrary address, or it may be one post office available for poste restante in whole city. Sender will not know anything more than the fact you can drive to this particular office.
        – Mołot
        21 hours ago








      • 1




        Or you could have it sent to your office, if this is something which is allowed/common where you live.
        – WoJ
        21 hours ago






      • 1




        @WoJ exposing where you work is arguably more risky, as it gives a fast and easy way for blackmail "Do what I want or I send ___ to your employer".
        – Mołot
        21 hours ago






      • 1




        @Mołot: maybe. This really depends on the risk context ("I do not want the guy to know where I live so that I am not robbed" vs. your example)
        – WoJ
        21 hours ago








      13




      13




      "In the end, it all comes down to trust. How much do you trust this person" It's beyond that - in the end, it all comes down to risk. How much wreckage could this person create with this trust.
      – Beanluc
      yesterday




      "In the end, it all comes down to trust. How much do you trust this person" It's beyond that - in the end, it all comes down to risk. How much wreckage could this person create with this trust.
      – Beanluc
      yesterday




      11




      11




      +1, but don't forget Poste Restante - it is free, in some areas even more available than boxes, and offer similar protection to PO box, you only reveal general area where you live, or post office that's convenient for you. And this does not even have to be post office near your home, depending on country you may be able to select one near your work or at arbitrary address, or it may be one post office available for poste restante in whole city. Sender will not know anything more than the fact you can drive to this particular office.
      – Mołot
      21 hours ago






      +1, but don't forget Poste Restante - it is free, in some areas even more available than boxes, and offer similar protection to PO box, you only reveal general area where you live, or post office that's convenient for you. And this does not even have to be post office near your home, depending on country you may be able to select one near your work or at arbitrary address, or it may be one post office available for poste restante in whole city. Sender will not know anything more than the fact you can drive to this particular office.
      – Mołot
      21 hours ago






      1




      1




      Or you could have it sent to your office, if this is something which is allowed/common where you live.
      – WoJ
      21 hours ago




      Or you could have it sent to your office, if this is something which is allowed/common where you live.
      – WoJ
      21 hours ago




      1




      1




      @WoJ exposing where you work is arguably more risky, as it gives a fast and easy way for blackmail "Do what I want or I send ___ to your employer".
      – Mołot
      21 hours ago




      @WoJ exposing where you work is arguably more risky, as it gives a fast and easy way for blackmail "Do what I want or I send ___ to your employer".
      – Mołot
      21 hours ago




      1




      1




      @Mołot: maybe. This really depends on the risk context ("I do not want the guy to know where I live so that I am not robbed" vs. your example)
      – WoJ
      21 hours ago




      @Mołot: maybe. This really depends on the risk context ("I do not want the guy to know where I live so that I am not robbed" vs. your example)
      – WoJ
      21 hours ago












      up vote
      43
      down vote













      Many countries' postal systems have general delivery by which you can receive a package held at a post office for you to pick up, without having to give the sender an address. This might be an option for you.



      In order for anyone else to assess how risky the situation is, I think you need to elaborate more on your relationship with the sender and the favor you performed for them. The vague way you've stated it is a big red flag for scams, involvement in money laundering, etc. but it may be that you've just poorly stated the situation out of a wish for privacy. At the very least though you should mention (or at least reflect upon for yourself) whether you had any relationship with the person prior to their asking you for a favor and whether you expected to be compensated in any way for the favor.






      share|improve this answer























      • Short of renting a PO box at the post office, this is the best option, the disadvantage being that you will not receive notification of reception, you just have to check in with the post office until it gets there.
        – Drunken Code Monkey
        yesterday






      • 5




        @DrunkenCodeMonkey Depends on the country and system. For example Australia Post now offers a "Parcel Collect" option which is effectively a form of Poste Restante with notifications (when addressed with a customer number you sign up for). Check what your local postal services offer.
        – Bob
        yesterday










      • @DrunkenCodeMonkey Agreeing with Bob. In Germany we also have the option to receive SMS or eMail notifications upon receiving mail which was delivered to a post office.
        – GxTruth
        15 hours ago















      up vote
      43
      down vote













      Many countries' postal systems have general delivery by which you can receive a package held at a post office for you to pick up, without having to give the sender an address. This might be an option for you.



      In order for anyone else to assess how risky the situation is, I think you need to elaborate more on your relationship with the sender and the favor you performed for them. The vague way you've stated it is a big red flag for scams, involvement in money laundering, etc. but it may be that you've just poorly stated the situation out of a wish for privacy. At the very least though you should mention (or at least reflect upon for yourself) whether you had any relationship with the person prior to their asking you for a favor and whether you expected to be compensated in any way for the favor.






      share|improve this answer























      • Short of renting a PO box at the post office, this is the best option, the disadvantage being that you will not receive notification of reception, you just have to check in with the post office until it gets there.
        – Drunken Code Monkey
        yesterday






      • 5




        @DrunkenCodeMonkey Depends on the country and system. For example Australia Post now offers a "Parcel Collect" option which is effectively a form of Poste Restante with notifications (when addressed with a customer number you sign up for). Check what your local postal services offer.
        – Bob
        yesterday










      • @DrunkenCodeMonkey Agreeing with Bob. In Germany we also have the option to receive SMS or eMail notifications upon receiving mail which was delivered to a post office.
        – GxTruth
        15 hours ago













      up vote
      43
      down vote










      up vote
      43
      down vote









      Many countries' postal systems have general delivery by which you can receive a package held at a post office for you to pick up, without having to give the sender an address. This might be an option for you.



      In order for anyone else to assess how risky the situation is, I think you need to elaborate more on your relationship with the sender and the favor you performed for them. The vague way you've stated it is a big red flag for scams, involvement in money laundering, etc. but it may be that you've just poorly stated the situation out of a wish for privacy. At the very least though you should mention (or at least reflect upon for yourself) whether you had any relationship with the person prior to their asking you for a favor and whether you expected to be compensated in any way for the favor.






      share|improve this answer














      Many countries' postal systems have general delivery by which you can receive a package held at a post office for you to pick up, without having to give the sender an address. This might be an option for you.



      In order for anyone else to assess how risky the situation is, I think you need to elaborate more on your relationship with the sender and the favor you performed for them. The vague way you've stated it is a big red flag for scams, involvement in money laundering, etc. but it may be that you've just poorly stated the situation out of a wish for privacy. At the very least though you should mention (or at least reflect upon for yourself) whether you had any relationship with the person prior to their asking you for a favor and whether you expected to be compensated in any way for the favor.







      share|improve this answer














      share|improve this answer



      share|improve this answer








      edited yesterday

























      answered yesterday









      R..

      4,38711418




      4,38711418












      • Short of renting a PO box at the post office, this is the best option, the disadvantage being that you will not receive notification of reception, you just have to check in with the post office until it gets there.
        – Drunken Code Monkey
        yesterday






      • 5




        @DrunkenCodeMonkey Depends on the country and system. For example Australia Post now offers a "Parcel Collect" option which is effectively a form of Poste Restante with notifications (when addressed with a customer number you sign up for). Check what your local postal services offer.
        – Bob
        yesterday










      • @DrunkenCodeMonkey Agreeing with Bob. In Germany we also have the option to receive SMS or eMail notifications upon receiving mail which was delivered to a post office.
        – GxTruth
        15 hours ago


















      • Short of renting a PO box at the post office, this is the best option, the disadvantage being that you will not receive notification of reception, you just have to check in with the post office until it gets there.
        – Drunken Code Monkey
        yesterday






      • 5




        @DrunkenCodeMonkey Depends on the country and system. For example Australia Post now offers a "Parcel Collect" option which is effectively a form of Poste Restante with notifications (when addressed with a customer number you sign up for). Check what your local postal services offer.
        – Bob
        yesterday










      • @DrunkenCodeMonkey Agreeing with Bob. In Germany we also have the option to receive SMS or eMail notifications upon receiving mail which was delivered to a post office.
        – GxTruth
        15 hours ago
















      Short of renting a PO box at the post office, this is the best option, the disadvantage being that you will not receive notification of reception, you just have to check in with the post office until it gets there.
      – Drunken Code Monkey
      yesterday




      Short of renting a PO box at the post office, this is the best option, the disadvantage being that you will not receive notification of reception, you just have to check in with the post office until it gets there.
      – Drunken Code Monkey
      yesterday




      5




      5




      @DrunkenCodeMonkey Depends on the country and system. For example Australia Post now offers a "Parcel Collect" option which is effectively a form of Poste Restante with notifications (when addressed with a customer number you sign up for). Check what your local postal services offer.
      – Bob
      yesterday




      @DrunkenCodeMonkey Depends on the country and system. For example Australia Post now offers a "Parcel Collect" option which is effectively a form of Poste Restante with notifications (when addressed with a customer number you sign up for). Check what your local postal services offer.
      – Bob
      yesterday












      @DrunkenCodeMonkey Agreeing with Bob. In Germany we also have the option to receive SMS or eMail notifications upon receiving mail which was delivered to a post office.
      – GxTruth
      15 hours ago




      @DrunkenCodeMonkey Agreeing with Bob. In Germany we also have the option to receive SMS or eMail notifications upon receiving mail which was delivered to a post office.
      – GxTruth
      15 hours ago










      up vote
      8
      down vote













      The whole favour thing--which they initiated--sounds rather like a setup aimed at getting your personal info. So I would recommend being very cautious here, and graciously declining their offer. Ask them to "pass it on" or "pay it forward" or something. The more they demand to get your info, the more suspicious you have a right to be.






      share|improve this answer








      New contributor




      CCTO is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
      Check out our Code of Conduct.














      • 6




        "Pay it forward" great advice. Just because I do a favour for a stranger, doesn't mean I now have to trust that stranger. It's called a confidence trick, not because I give the trickster my confidence, but because he gives me his. He asks me for a favour, to make me trust him.
        – Ben
        20 hours ago

















      up vote
      8
      down vote













      The whole favour thing--which they initiated--sounds rather like a setup aimed at getting your personal info. So I would recommend being very cautious here, and graciously declining their offer. Ask them to "pass it on" or "pay it forward" or something. The more they demand to get your info, the more suspicious you have a right to be.






      share|improve this answer








      New contributor




      CCTO is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
      Check out our Code of Conduct.














      • 6




        "Pay it forward" great advice. Just because I do a favour for a stranger, doesn't mean I now have to trust that stranger. It's called a confidence trick, not because I give the trickster my confidence, but because he gives me his. He asks me for a favour, to make me trust him.
        – Ben
        20 hours ago















      up vote
      8
      down vote










      up vote
      8
      down vote









      The whole favour thing--which they initiated--sounds rather like a setup aimed at getting your personal info. So I would recommend being very cautious here, and graciously declining their offer. Ask them to "pass it on" or "pay it forward" or something. The more they demand to get your info, the more suspicious you have a right to be.






      share|improve this answer








      New contributor




      CCTO is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
      Check out our Code of Conduct.









      The whole favour thing--which they initiated--sounds rather like a setup aimed at getting your personal info. So I would recommend being very cautious here, and graciously declining their offer. Ask them to "pass it on" or "pay it forward" or something. The more they demand to get your info, the more suspicious you have a right to be.







      share|improve this answer








      New contributor




      CCTO is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
      Check out our Code of Conduct.









      share|improve this answer



      share|improve this answer






      New contributor




      CCTO is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
      Check out our Code of Conduct.









      answered yesterday









      CCTO

      1811




      1811




      New contributor




      CCTO is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
      Check out our Code of Conduct.





      New contributor





      CCTO is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
      Check out our Code of Conduct.






      CCTO is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
      Check out our Code of Conduct.








      • 6




        "Pay it forward" great advice. Just because I do a favour for a stranger, doesn't mean I now have to trust that stranger. It's called a confidence trick, not because I give the trickster my confidence, but because he gives me his. He asks me for a favour, to make me trust him.
        – Ben
        20 hours ago
















      • 6




        "Pay it forward" great advice. Just because I do a favour for a stranger, doesn't mean I now have to trust that stranger. It's called a confidence trick, not because I give the trickster my confidence, but because he gives me his. He asks me for a favour, to make me trust him.
        – Ben
        20 hours ago










      6




      6




      "Pay it forward" great advice. Just because I do a favour for a stranger, doesn't mean I now have to trust that stranger. It's called a confidence trick, not because I give the trickster my confidence, but because he gives me his. He asks me for a favour, to make me trust him.
      – Ben
      20 hours ago






      "Pay it forward" great advice. Just because I do a favour for a stranger, doesn't mean I now have to trust that stranger. It's called a confidence trick, not because I give the trickster my confidence, but because he gives me his. He asks me for a favour, to make me trust him.
      – Ben
      20 hours ago












      up vote
      8
      down vote













      Depending on the country you are in, your physical address is enough to do quite a lot of damage, or at least cause a huge amount of nuisance. Common examples:




      • An antagonist using your address to order delivery of unwanted, pay-on-delivery things (pizzas being the canonical example, but I've also been subject to Internet pranksters sending evangelicals to my home to try to convert me)

      • Being "doxed" and have your private information put online for stalkers/harassers to take advantage of

      • In the US, Swatting, which has resulted in deaths and significant property damage

      • Your address can also be used to socially-engineer others into e.g. giving up other identifying information, seizing domain names, or making you an unwitting part of a "lost delivery" or "brushing" scam


      So you are probably right to limit sharing your mailing address to people you don't know if you can trust with the information.



      As other answers have stated, you can minimize your exposure by using a PO box or similar; you may also be able to find mail hold-and-forward facilities that can handle individual pieces of mail or parcels (which usually charge by the piece of mail and whatever additional handling is necessary for the forwarding itself); this can be much more convenient to you than a PO box, as well as less costly overall since you don't need to rent it on a monthly basis.






      share|improve this answer

























        up vote
        8
        down vote













        Depending on the country you are in, your physical address is enough to do quite a lot of damage, or at least cause a huge amount of nuisance. Common examples:




        • An antagonist using your address to order delivery of unwanted, pay-on-delivery things (pizzas being the canonical example, but I've also been subject to Internet pranksters sending evangelicals to my home to try to convert me)

        • Being "doxed" and have your private information put online for stalkers/harassers to take advantage of

        • In the US, Swatting, which has resulted in deaths and significant property damage

        • Your address can also be used to socially-engineer others into e.g. giving up other identifying information, seizing domain names, or making you an unwitting part of a "lost delivery" or "brushing" scam


        So you are probably right to limit sharing your mailing address to people you don't know if you can trust with the information.



        As other answers have stated, you can minimize your exposure by using a PO box or similar; you may also be able to find mail hold-and-forward facilities that can handle individual pieces of mail or parcels (which usually charge by the piece of mail and whatever additional handling is necessary for the forwarding itself); this can be much more convenient to you than a PO box, as well as less costly overall since you don't need to rent it on a monthly basis.






        share|improve this answer























          up vote
          8
          down vote










          up vote
          8
          down vote









          Depending on the country you are in, your physical address is enough to do quite a lot of damage, or at least cause a huge amount of nuisance. Common examples:




          • An antagonist using your address to order delivery of unwanted, pay-on-delivery things (pizzas being the canonical example, but I've also been subject to Internet pranksters sending evangelicals to my home to try to convert me)

          • Being "doxed" and have your private information put online for stalkers/harassers to take advantage of

          • In the US, Swatting, which has resulted in deaths and significant property damage

          • Your address can also be used to socially-engineer others into e.g. giving up other identifying information, seizing domain names, or making you an unwitting part of a "lost delivery" or "brushing" scam


          So you are probably right to limit sharing your mailing address to people you don't know if you can trust with the information.



          As other answers have stated, you can minimize your exposure by using a PO box or similar; you may also be able to find mail hold-and-forward facilities that can handle individual pieces of mail or parcels (which usually charge by the piece of mail and whatever additional handling is necessary for the forwarding itself); this can be much more convenient to you than a PO box, as well as less costly overall since you don't need to rent it on a monthly basis.






          share|improve this answer












          Depending on the country you are in, your physical address is enough to do quite a lot of damage, or at least cause a huge amount of nuisance. Common examples:




          • An antagonist using your address to order delivery of unwanted, pay-on-delivery things (pizzas being the canonical example, but I've also been subject to Internet pranksters sending evangelicals to my home to try to convert me)

          • Being "doxed" and have your private information put online for stalkers/harassers to take advantage of

          • In the US, Swatting, which has resulted in deaths and significant property damage

          • Your address can also be used to socially-engineer others into e.g. giving up other identifying information, seizing domain names, or making you an unwitting part of a "lost delivery" or "brushing" scam


          So you are probably right to limit sharing your mailing address to people you don't know if you can trust with the information.



          As other answers have stated, you can minimize your exposure by using a PO box or similar; you may also be able to find mail hold-and-forward facilities that can handle individual pieces of mail or parcels (which usually charge by the piece of mail and whatever additional handling is necessary for the forwarding itself); this can be much more convenient to you than a PO box, as well as less costly overall since you don't need to rent it on a monthly basis.







          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered yesterday









          fluffy

          1,204188




          1,204188






















              up vote
              3
              down vote













              Just giving out the address is no problem, as long as you limit it to the address. Don't you have phone directories "white pages" or similar where you live?



              Think about it, hundreds of people probably have your home address. Of course, any of them could send you something illegal, immoral etc but as long as you act reasonably (E.g., you open an envelope and there is something that looks like drugs in, as long as you immediately call the police and you live in a reasonable country, nothing will happen to you. Rather, you will be greeted as some local hero if some local paper hears of the story.) there won't be any problems.



              Same goes for this situation.






              share|improve this answer

















              • 4




                Downvoted because in my opinion (and as explained in other answers below) there are risks involved.
                – Kevin Voorn
                20 hours ago










              • Give three examples of where people have got into trouble after ONLY giving out their postal address and where sending this information to an outsider was the culprit.
                – d-b
                20 hours ago






              • 2




                Read the answer of fluffy down below for some possible risks. I'd like to add postal fraud to that as seen in the answer that Lithilion gave, which is a common thing in the Netherlands to do for example.
                – Kevin Voorn
                20 hours ago






              • 1




                @d-b even if an address associated with a name itself were not in any way misusable by a motivated player, we still don't know what other information that person already has from other sources about OP, so handing out the address might only be one further puzzle piece they require to achieve their nefarious goals. Not saying there is anything nefarious going on though, to gauge that is ultimately up to OP.
                – Darkwing
                14 hours ago






              • 1




                I live in 2018 so I haven't seen a "white pages" in at least a decade
                – Azor Ahai
                14 hours ago















              up vote
              3
              down vote













              Just giving out the address is no problem, as long as you limit it to the address. Don't you have phone directories "white pages" or similar where you live?



              Think about it, hundreds of people probably have your home address. Of course, any of them could send you something illegal, immoral etc but as long as you act reasonably (E.g., you open an envelope and there is something that looks like drugs in, as long as you immediately call the police and you live in a reasonable country, nothing will happen to you. Rather, you will be greeted as some local hero if some local paper hears of the story.) there won't be any problems.



              Same goes for this situation.






              share|improve this answer

















              • 4




                Downvoted because in my opinion (and as explained in other answers below) there are risks involved.
                – Kevin Voorn
                20 hours ago










              • Give three examples of where people have got into trouble after ONLY giving out their postal address and where sending this information to an outsider was the culprit.
                – d-b
                20 hours ago






              • 2




                Read the answer of fluffy down below for some possible risks. I'd like to add postal fraud to that as seen in the answer that Lithilion gave, which is a common thing in the Netherlands to do for example.
                – Kevin Voorn
                20 hours ago






              • 1




                @d-b even if an address associated with a name itself were not in any way misusable by a motivated player, we still don't know what other information that person already has from other sources about OP, so handing out the address might only be one further puzzle piece they require to achieve their nefarious goals. Not saying there is anything nefarious going on though, to gauge that is ultimately up to OP.
                – Darkwing
                14 hours ago






              • 1




                I live in 2018 so I haven't seen a "white pages" in at least a decade
                – Azor Ahai
                14 hours ago













              up vote
              3
              down vote










              up vote
              3
              down vote









              Just giving out the address is no problem, as long as you limit it to the address. Don't you have phone directories "white pages" or similar where you live?



              Think about it, hundreds of people probably have your home address. Of course, any of them could send you something illegal, immoral etc but as long as you act reasonably (E.g., you open an envelope and there is something that looks like drugs in, as long as you immediately call the police and you live in a reasonable country, nothing will happen to you. Rather, you will be greeted as some local hero if some local paper hears of the story.) there won't be any problems.



              Same goes for this situation.






              share|improve this answer












              Just giving out the address is no problem, as long as you limit it to the address. Don't you have phone directories "white pages" or similar where you live?



              Think about it, hundreds of people probably have your home address. Of course, any of them could send you something illegal, immoral etc but as long as you act reasonably (E.g., you open an envelope and there is something that looks like drugs in, as long as you immediately call the police and you live in a reasonable country, nothing will happen to you. Rather, you will be greeted as some local hero if some local paper hears of the story.) there won't be any problems.



              Same goes for this situation.







              share|improve this answer












              share|improve this answer



              share|improve this answer










              answered yesterday









              d-b

              1654




              1654








              • 4




                Downvoted because in my opinion (and as explained in other answers below) there are risks involved.
                – Kevin Voorn
                20 hours ago










              • Give three examples of where people have got into trouble after ONLY giving out their postal address and where sending this information to an outsider was the culprit.
                – d-b
                20 hours ago






              • 2




                Read the answer of fluffy down below for some possible risks. I'd like to add postal fraud to that as seen in the answer that Lithilion gave, which is a common thing in the Netherlands to do for example.
                – Kevin Voorn
                20 hours ago






              • 1




                @d-b even if an address associated with a name itself were not in any way misusable by a motivated player, we still don't know what other information that person already has from other sources about OP, so handing out the address might only be one further puzzle piece they require to achieve their nefarious goals. Not saying there is anything nefarious going on though, to gauge that is ultimately up to OP.
                – Darkwing
                14 hours ago






              • 1




                I live in 2018 so I haven't seen a "white pages" in at least a decade
                – Azor Ahai
                14 hours ago














              • 4




                Downvoted because in my opinion (and as explained in other answers below) there are risks involved.
                – Kevin Voorn
                20 hours ago










              • Give three examples of where people have got into trouble after ONLY giving out their postal address and where sending this information to an outsider was the culprit.
                – d-b
                20 hours ago






              • 2




                Read the answer of fluffy down below for some possible risks. I'd like to add postal fraud to that as seen in the answer that Lithilion gave, which is a common thing in the Netherlands to do for example.
                – Kevin Voorn
                20 hours ago






              • 1




                @d-b even if an address associated with a name itself were not in any way misusable by a motivated player, we still don't know what other information that person already has from other sources about OP, so handing out the address might only be one further puzzle piece they require to achieve their nefarious goals. Not saying there is anything nefarious going on though, to gauge that is ultimately up to OP.
                – Darkwing
                14 hours ago






              • 1




                I live in 2018 so I haven't seen a "white pages" in at least a decade
                – Azor Ahai
                14 hours ago








              4




              4




              Downvoted because in my opinion (and as explained in other answers below) there are risks involved.
              – Kevin Voorn
              20 hours ago




              Downvoted because in my opinion (and as explained in other answers below) there are risks involved.
              – Kevin Voorn
              20 hours ago












              Give three examples of where people have got into trouble after ONLY giving out their postal address and where sending this information to an outsider was the culprit.
              – d-b
              20 hours ago




              Give three examples of where people have got into trouble after ONLY giving out their postal address and where sending this information to an outsider was the culprit.
              – d-b
              20 hours ago




              2




              2




              Read the answer of fluffy down below for some possible risks. I'd like to add postal fraud to that as seen in the answer that Lithilion gave, which is a common thing in the Netherlands to do for example.
              – Kevin Voorn
              20 hours ago




              Read the answer of fluffy down below for some possible risks. I'd like to add postal fraud to that as seen in the answer that Lithilion gave, which is a common thing in the Netherlands to do for example.
              – Kevin Voorn
              20 hours ago




              1




              1




              @d-b even if an address associated with a name itself were not in any way misusable by a motivated player, we still don't know what other information that person already has from other sources about OP, so handing out the address might only be one further puzzle piece they require to achieve their nefarious goals. Not saying there is anything nefarious going on though, to gauge that is ultimately up to OP.
              – Darkwing
              14 hours ago




              @d-b even if an address associated with a name itself were not in any way misusable by a motivated player, we still don't know what other information that person already has from other sources about OP, so handing out the address might only be one further puzzle piece they require to achieve their nefarious goals. Not saying there is anything nefarious going on though, to gauge that is ultimately up to OP.
              – Darkwing
              14 hours ago




              1




              1




              I live in 2018 so I haven't seen a "white pages" in at least a decade
              – Azor Ahai
              14 hours ago




              I live in 2018 so I haven't seen a "white pages" in at least a decade
              – Azor Ahai
              14 hours ago










              up vote
              2
              down vote













              Be careful about personal information. There was a crime in Austria reported some days ago, where people ordered stuff online to some strangers addresses and then redirected it through an app from the delivery service. Of course they never paid anything but the strangers got payment reminders.



              I've got a news article about this, but unfortunately only in german. (Try a translater): https://wien.orf.at/news/stories/2948455/






              share|improve this answer








              New contributor




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                up vote
                2
                down vote













                Be careful about personal information. There was a crime in Austria reported some days ago, where people ordered stuff online to some strangers addresses and then redirected it through an app from the delivery service. Of course they never paid anything but the strangers got payment reminders.



                I've got a news article about this, but unfortunately only in german. (Try a translater): https://wien.orf.at/news/stories/2948455/






                share|improve this answer








                New contributor




                Lithilion is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                Check out our Code of Conduct.




















                  up vote
                  2
                  down vote










                  up vote
                  2
                  down vote









                  Be careful about personal information. There was a crime in Austria reported some days ago, where people ordered stuff online to some strangers addresses and then redirected it through an app from the delivery service. Of course they never paid anything but the strangers got payment reminders.



                  I've got a news article about this, but unfortunately only in german. (Try a translater): https://wien.orf.at/news/stories/2948455/






                  share|improve this answer








                  New contributor




                  Lithilion is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                  Check out our Code of Conduct.









                  Be careful about personal information. There was a crime in Austria reported some days ago, where people ordered stuff online to some strangers addresses and then redirected it through an app from the delivery service. Of course they never paid anything but the strangers got payment reminders.



                  I've got a news article about this, but unfortunately only in german. (Try a translater): https://wien.orf.at/news/stories/2948455/







                  share|improve this answer








                  New contributor




                  Lithilion is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer






                  New contributor




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                  answered yesterday









                  Lithilion

                  5831210




                  5831210




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                  New contributor





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                      up vote
                      -1
                      down vote













                      In the UK, Belgium and Holland, most corner shops are part of one or more logistics networks, and hence drop-off points for senders; with many also pickup points. Often (via say Amazon.UK or Bol.com etc) you can choose them as destination from webshops. These same networks should fit in the chain that gets the package to you.



                      It's a very reasonable idea to tell the sender: You'll be out at work (though I use my work address for such, which has a receptionist!) so would hate to miss the gift. So go to the cornershop where they know you by sight or name, ask if you can get it delivered in your name ["A.E. Neumann, C/O The Corner Shop, 12 High Street, Mummerset"] there. This doesn't unload the risk onto them, as its your name and their location so not relevant to any bank account or so.



                      But consider they might find your real address even then. E.g., in the UK, I was surprised when googling my name for free it clearly hints my longterm partners (several addresses shared over time; precise up to city quarter if not paying for the data; a mixture of Electoral roll data before opting out, and other sources).



                      I wouldn't judge this approach risky; in the real world there's thousands of instances where your details have been taken at a higher risk. I once got one UK parking fine (escalated over months of non-paying) while not owning a car, having no driving license, nor living (nor having lived) in the country; somebody had declared to the parking attendant that it was my car, and passed my details (collected from a B&B guest registration years before, in another country, because very very specifically misspelled)! Of course in ID-card-less UK there's no trace of the original declarant (I bet the then-owner), and I think no legal way for an individual like me to find the car owner's info from their numberplate. To get the bailiffs off eventually took months, hours of paperwork, various registered letters, and a statement from the DVLA (the UK "DMV") that I wasn't the owner.






                      share|improve this answer








                      New contributor




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                      • 2




                        What does this add to the other 6 answers?
                        – Tom K.
                        17 hours ago










                      • You can find the registered keeper's name and address from DVLA provided you have "reasonable cause": gov.uk/government/publications/…
                        – Martin Bonner
                        16 hours ago















                      up vote
                      -1
                      down vote













                      In the UK, Belgium and Holland, most corner shops are part of one or more logistics networks, and hence drop-off points for senders; with many also pickup points. Often (via say Amazon.UK or Bol.com etc) you can choose them as destination from webshops. These same networks should fit in the chain that gets the package to you.



                      It's a very reasonable idea to tell the sender: You'll be out at work (though I use my work address for such, which has a receptionist!) so would hate to miss the gift. So go to the cornershop where they know you by sight or name, ask if you can get it delivered in your name ["A.E. Neumann, C/O The Corner Shop, 12 High Street, Mummerset"] there. This doesn't unload the risk onto them, as its your name and their location so not relevant to any bank account or so.



                      But consider they might find your real address even then. E.g., in the UK, I was surprised when googling my name for free it clearly hints my longterm partners (several addresses shared over time; precise up to city quarter if not paying for the data; a mixture of Electoral roll data before opting out, and other sources).



                      I wouldn't judge this approach risky; in the real world there's thousands of instances where your details have been taken at a higher risk. I once got one UK parking fine (escalated over months of non-paying) while not owning a car, having no driving license, nor living (nor having lived) in the country; somebody had declared to the parking attendant that it was my car, and passed my details (collected from a B&B guest registration years before, in another country, because very very specifically misspelled)! Of course in ID-card-less UK there's no trace of the original declarant (I bet the then-owner), and I think no legal way for an individual like me to find the car owner's info from their numberplate. To get the bailiffs off eventually took months, hours of paperwork, various registered letters, and a statement from the DVLA (the UK "DMV") that I wasn't the owner.






                      share|improve this answer








                      New contributor




                      user3445853 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                      Check out our Code of Conduct.














                      • 2




                        What does this add to the other 6 answers?
                        – Tom K.
                        17 hours ago










                      • You can find the registered keeper's name and address from DVLA provided you have "reasonable cause": gov.uk/government/publications/…
                        – Martin Bonner
                        16 hours ago













                      up vote
                      -1
                      down vote










                      up vote
                      -1
                      down vote









                      In the UK, Belgium and Holland, most corner shops are part of one or more logistics networks, and hence drop-off points for senders; with many also pickup points. Often (via say Amazon.UK or Bol.com etc) you can choose them as destination from webshops. These same networks should fit in the chain that gets the package to you.



                      It's a very reasonable idea to tell the sender: You'll be out at work (though I use my work address for such, which has a receptionist!) so would hate to miss the gift. So go to the cornershop where they know you by sight or name, ask if you can get it delivered in your name ["A.E. Neumann, C/O The Corner Shop, 12 High Street, Mummerset"] there. This doesn't unload the risk onto them, as its your name and their location so not relevant to any bank account or so.



                      But consider they might find your real address even then. E.g., in the UK, I was surprised when googling my name for free it clearly hints my longterm partners (several addresses shared over time; precise up to city quarter if not paying for the data; a mixture of Electoral roll data before opting out, and other sources).



                      I wouldn't judge this approach risky; in the real world there's thousands of instances where your details have been taken at a higher risk. I once got one UK parking fine (escalated over months of non-paying) while not owning a car, having no driving license, nor living (nor having lived) in the country; somebody had declared to the parking attendant that it was my car, and passed my details (collected from a B&B guest registration years before, in another country, because very very specifically misspelled)! Of course in ID-card-less UK there's no trace of the original declarant (I bet the then-owner), and I think no legal way for an individual like me to find the car owner's info from their numberplate. To get the bailiffs off eventually took months, hours of paperwork, various registered letters, and a statement from the DVLA (the UK "DMV") that I wasn't the owner.






                      share|improve this answer








                      New contributor




                      user3445853 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                      Check out our Code of Conduct.









                      In the UK, Belgium and Holland, most corner shops are part of one or more logistics networks, and hence drop-off points for senders; with many also pickup points. Often (via say Amazon.UK or Bol.com etc) you can choose them as destination from webshops. These same networks should fit in the chain that gets the package to you.



                      It's a very reasonable idea to tell the sender: You'll be out at work (though I use my work address for such, which has a receptionist!) so would hate to miss the gift. So go to the cornershop where they know you by sight or name, ask if you can get it delivered in your name ["A.E. Neumann, C/O The Corner Shop, 12 High Street, Mummerset"] there. This doesn't unload the risk onto them, as its your name and their location so not relevant to any bank account or so.



                      But consider they might find your real address even then. E.g., in the UK, I was surprised when googling my name for free it clearly hints my longterm partners (several addresses shared over time; precise up to city quarter if not paying for the data; a mixture of Electoral roll data before opting out, and other sources).



                      I wouldn't judge this approach risky; in the real world there's thousands of instances where your details have been taken at a higher risk. I once got one UK parking fine (escalated over months of non-paying) while not owning a car, having no driving license, nor living (nor having lived) in the country; somebody had declared to the parking attendant that it was my car, and passed my details (collected from a B&B guest registration years before, in another country, because very very specifically misspelled)! Of course in ID-card-less UK there's no trace of the original declarant (I bet the then-owner), and I think no legal way for an individual like me to find the car owner's info from their numberplate. To get the bailiffs off eventually took months, hours of paperwork, various registered letters, and a statement from the DVLA (the UK "DMV") that I wasn't the owner.







                      share|improve this answer








                      New contributor




                      user3445853 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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                      share|improve this answer



                      share|improve this answer






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                      answered 18 hours ago









                      user3445853

                      107




                      107




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                      New contributor





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                      • 2




                        What does this add to the other 6 answers?
                        – Tom K.
                        17 hours ago










                      • You can find the registered keeper's name and address from DVLA provided you have "reasonable cause": gov.uk/government/publications/…
                        – Martin Bonner
                        16 hours ago














                      • 2




                        What does this add to the other 6 answers?
                        – Tom K.
                        17 hours ago










                      • You can find the registered keeper's name and address from DVLA provided you have "reasonable cause": gov.uk/government/publications/…
                        – Martin Bonner
                        16 hours ago








                      2




                      2




                      What does this add to the other 6 answers?
                      – Tom K.
                      17 hours ago




                      What does this add to the other 6 answers?
                      – Tom K.
                      17 hours ago












                      You can find the registered keeper's name and address from DVLA provided you have "reasonable cause": gov.uk/government/publications/…
                      – Martin Bonner
                      16 hours ago




                      You can find the registered keeper's name and address from DVLA provided you have "reasonable cause": gov.uk/government/publications/…
                      – Martin Bonner
                      16 hours ago










                      up vote
                      -2
                      down vote













                      I do not know where you meet that person or what kind of relationship you two have, it does sound a little bit weird to ask for your personal address if you are just begining your relationship. I personally do not think that giving your address posses a terrible risk, it is usually fairly easy to access this data and unless the person is determined to damaged you (i.e. if you had a bad argument or any other cause) I would not think that we wants to swat you for free, for example.



                      Ask for a tracking number, the only problem would be if this person contacts you asking you to pay some taxes/wages because of a problem with the package... the story reminds me a litte bit of a common Tinder scam (military romace scam: http://www.cid.army.mil/romancescam.html).



                      EDIT: As @Kevin says, of course it can be a risk to share your address with someone you do not trust to the point that you think he is able to do you some serious damage utilizing your address.






                      share|improve this answer










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                      • 1




                        Downvoted because in my opinion (and as explained in other answers below) there are risks involved.
                        – Kevin Voorn
                        20 hours ago










                      • Thanks for the comment, Kevin!
                        – Rocío García Luque
                        13 hours ago















                      up vote
                      -2
                      down vote













                      I do not know where you meet that person or what kind of relationship you two have, it does sound a little bit weird to ask for your personal address if you are just begining your relationship. I personally do not think that giving your address posses a terrible risk, it is usually fairly easy to access this data and unless the person is determined to damaged you (i.e. if you had a bad argument or any other cause) I would not think that we wants to swat you for free, for example.



                      Ask for a tracking number, the only problem would be if this person contacts you asking you to pay some taxes/wages because of a problem with the package... the story reminds me a litte bit of a common Tinder scam (military romace scam: http://www.cid.army.mil/romancescam.html).



                      EDIT: As @Kevin says, of course it can be a risk to share your address with someone you do not trust to the point that you think he is able to do you some serious damage utilizing your address.






                      share|improve this answer










                      New contributor




                      Rocío García Luque is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                      Check out our Code of Conduct.














                      • 1




                        Downvoted because in my opinion (and as explained in other answers below) there are risks involved.
                        – Kevin Voorn
                        20 hours ago










                      • Thanks for the comment, Kevin!
                        – Rocío García Luque
                        13 hours ago













                      up vote
                      -2
                      down vote










                      up vote
                      -2
                      down vote









                      I do not know where you meet that person or what kind of relationship you two have, it does sound a little bit weird to ask for your personal address if you are just begining your relationship. I personally do not think that giving your address posses a terrible risk, it is usually fairly easy to access this data and unless the person is determined to damaged you (i.e. if you had a bad argument or any other cause) I would not think that we wants to swat you for free, for example.



                      Ask for a tracking number, the only problem would be if this person contacts you asking you to pay some taxes/wages because of a problem with the package... the story reminds me a litte bit of a common Tinder scam (military romace scam: http://www.cid.army.mil/romancescam.html).



                      EDIT: As @Kevin says, of course it can be a risk to share your address with someone you do not trust to the point that you think he is able to do you some serious damage utilizing your address.






                      share|improve this answer










                      New contributor




                      Rocío García Luque is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                      Check out our Code of Conduct.









                      I do not know where you meet that person or what kind of relationship you two have, it does sound a little bit weird to ask for your personal address if you are just begining your relationship. I personally do not think that giving your address posses a terrible risk, it is usually fairly easy to access this data and unless the person is determined to damaged you (i.e. if you had a bad argument or any other cause) I would not think that we wants to swat you for free, for example.



                      Ask for a tracking number, the only problem would be if this person contacts you asking you to pay some taxes/wages because of a problem with the package... the story reminds me a litte bit of a common Tinder scam (military romace scam: http://www.cid.army.mil/romancescam.html).



                      EDIT: As @Kevin says, of course it can be a risk to share your address with someone you do not trust to the point that you think he is able to do you some serious damage utilizing your address.







                      share|improve this answer










                      New contributor




                      Rocío García Luque is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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                      share|improve this answer



                      share|improve this answer








                      edited 13 hours ago





















                      New contributor




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                      answered 23 hours ago









                      Rocío García Luque

                      972




                      972




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                      New contributor





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                      • 1




                        Downvoted because in my opinion (and as explained in other answers below) there are risks involved.
                        – Kevin Voorn
                        20 hours ago










                      • Thanks for the comment, Kevin!
                        – Rocío García Luque
                        13 hours ago














                      • 1




                        Downvoted because in my opinion (and as explained in other answers below) there are risks involved.
                        – Kevin Voorn
                        20 hours ago










                      • Thanks for the comment, Kevin!
                        – Rocío García Luque
                        13 hours ago








                      1




                      1




                      Downvoted because in my opinion (and as explained in other answers below) there are risks involved.
                      – Kevin Voorn
                      20 hours ago




                      Downvoted because in my opinion (and as explained in other answers below) there are risks involved.
                      – Kevin Voorn
                      20 hours ago












                      Thanks for the comment, Kevin!
                      – Rocío García Luque
                      13 hours ago




                      Thanks for the comment, Kevin!
                      – Rocío García Luque
                      13 hours ago










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