While waiting for your last holiday purchase to arrive, it may be tempting to open a text inviting you to check new tracking information. Don’t do it, warns Florida’s Attorney General Ashley Moody, unless you’re sure the text really did come from your shipper. Scam “robotexts” about package shipping updates are a common way crooks get people to unwittingly give up their personal or financial information, Moody says. The tactic is called “smishing” and is one of the latest ways Internet criminals trick victims.  The fake texts offering shipping updates often appear, at first glance, to be helpful messages from the United States Postal Service (USPS), FedEx, UPS or other big-name shippers. But most shippers, including USPS, won’t send a text with package-tracking updates, unless you’ve signed up to receive those, Moody says.  Clicking on the link in the fake update may allow crooks to put a damaging virus on …