Dear Amazon: I'm not pregnant. I don't have a baby registry. @abbyohlheiser , can you get to the bottom of this? pic.twitter.com/U1sd0XOBRt

You know that story about how Target was able to predict that a teen girl was pregnant based on her shopping habits? Retailers have a lot of information about you based on things you watch and stuff you buy online, and they use this informative to send marketing emails, coupons, or product suggestions to get you to buy more things. But it looks like Amazon might be a little off on this latest attempt. The company appears to have sent a bunch of random customers emails saying a gift from their baby registry has been purchased, sending unintended recipients into mass confusion.

Uhhh, @amazon? You know something I don't know? Because I don't have a registry. Or a baby. pic.twitter.com/ja1WrpMZBi — Katie Leslie (@katieleslienews) September 19, 2017

Uh @amazon is this you or a phishing attempt? I don't have a baby registry anywhere. pic.twitter.com/nRrdnvoVxq — Sarah Kelly Shannon (@thesarahkelly) September 19, 2017

Amazon email: "A gift from your baby registry is on its way." Umm. This would be a helluva way to let me know, Atalie. :-P — Dustin B. Schwartz (@dustinbschwartz) September 19, 2017

Some recipients were concerned it was a phishing attempt. A few people who received the email say they clicked through to see what baby registry Amazon had referred to, but were taken to a broken webpage. Some users who did have a registry clicked through to find that no items had actually been purchased.

“A technical glitch caused us to inadvertently send a gift alert e-mail earlier today,” an Amazon spokesperson confirmed to The Verge. “We apologize for any confusion this may have caused.”

Though it’s not a deliberate phishing attack, it’s still probably best if you don’t click any part of that email and just giggle with the rest of the internet. Unless, of course, Amazon does know something you don’t.

Update September 19th 8:45PM ET: This article has been updated to confirm the glitch with a statement from Amazon.