• Patch Lady – 31 days of paranoia – day 3

    Home » Forums » Newsletter and Homepage topics » Patch Lady – 31 days of paranoia – day 3

    Author
    Topic
    #221290

    It’s a little bit fitting on a day when all of the cell phones in the United States went off with a Presidential alert that today’s paranoia topic is
    [See the full post at: Patch Lady – 31 days of paranoia – day 3]

    Susan Bradley Patch Lady/Prudent patcher

    7 users thanked author for this post.
    Viewing 28 reply threads
    Author
    Replies
    • #221296

      @Susan
      can you pls explain to those non-US what is this Presidential alert?
      What is it for? War drill? Sound weird or is it something serious?
      Thanks

      Please follow the –Lounge Rules

    • #221302

      I do two things to block unwanted callers:
      1. I block up to five numbers with my cellular provider – they can’t get through if I do that.
      2. I save those numbers in my cell phone and set those listings to “don’t ring”. This doesn’t block them, but they never get through to me, because I never know they have called till later.

      There was one IT recruiter who kept calling me over and over and over, several times a day for days and days, to tell me about a position for which I would have to take a huge pay cut. Everytime, I told them I wasn’t interested. I finally asked them why they kept calling. Nothing mattered, they kept calling. Because I am on the Do Not Call list, I was able to report them on that web site. I had the entire record of when they called simply by checking the call log in my cell phone. I submitted about 20 reports on them, giving the exact date and time of each call.

      Group "L" (Linux Mint)
      with Windows 10 running in a remote session on my file server
    • #221304

      I don’t block them, I just don’t answer any that are not in my contact list and their name shows on the screen.
      If they think it’s important, they’ll leave a message. If I think it’s important, I’ll call back. If I think they’re someone I want to continue communications with, I’ll put them in my contact list.

      Note: I live on my computer, not my cell phone.

      5 users thanked author for this post.
      • #221467

        Robocallers seem to hang up automatically when my answering machine takes their calls.  Human nuisance callers (telemarketers, surveys, etc.) are a little slower to disconnect but usually hang-up without leaving a message.

        I NEVER rush to answer the telephone.  People that I know and that know me will leave a message and I’ll get back to them.  And if I happen to be in range of a caller-id display the only time I’ll take a call is if I recognize the calling number.  Otherwise, talk to the machine.

        99.99% of the time calls to my landline or cell-phone are nuisance callers.

        These days I’m more likely to receive bona fide communications via e-mail or text message — it seems that old-fashioned voice communication is out of favor, especially with the younger generations.

        2 users thanked author for this post.
    • #221308

      I personally feel that signing up for don’t call me sites doesn’t work.

      I thought exactly the same thing… until last week when we switched our landline phone service. I ended up with two “temporary” phone numbers for some hours while they processed the change at the company central office. These two numbers were, of course, not on any kind of “do not call” list.

      I lost track of how many spam calls I got on the two lines in those few hours. There were at least 1-2 per hour, each. Normally, I’ll get 1-2 a day. I didn’t think so, but the Do Not Call list does make a difference.

       

      1 user thanked author for this post.
    • #221319

      “I am sorry, I do not discuss personal matters or arrange any sort of payment with people I do not know over the telephone. Please send me a letter.” <Click/End>

    • #221316

      Fluoroantimonic sarcasm. I rather like it when these idiots ring me up trying to convince me that they need access to my PC in order to remove its viruses or that I will be arrested for tax evasion unless I give them my bank account details: I can be outrageously rude back with a completely clear conscience. Then I try to get their number and report them to the appropriate body – a glorious opportunity to release aggression and feel self-righteous at the same time.

    • #221325

      It’s a complicated topic with imperfect solutions and evolving threats.  As one who works at home researching and writing, interruptions of this sort drive me nuts, so I have devoted some time and effort to solving the problem.  Currently:

      1.) I am signed up for the FCC do-not call list, which seems to have little effect.  A few years ago I would have said to look in New York City, Florida and the Medford, Oregon area to find clusters of phone spammers.  Nowadays many are apparently based outside the U.S.

      2.) I am signed up for Nomorobo, which makes use of the simultaneous-ring feature of VOIP phone systems to instantly check callers against a huge, constantly updated database of numbers being used to make repetitive calls.  Nomorobo got into business by winning an FCC-sponsored contest to develop a way to stop spam calls a few years ago.  Because it sees all the incoming calls of its users, it rather quickly gets a picture of phone numbers being used repetitively–this in addition to consulting other databases.  (Nomorobo needs VOIP and will not work on an old-fashioned land line.)

      3.) I have set up my landline phone to silence the first ring, which Nomorobo needs to establish caller ID.  Thus I almost never hear a ring from calls blocked by Nomorobo.  They still fill the phone screen with “missed calls.”

      4.)  I occasionally use the phone to block some phone numbers, especially local phone spammers like some contractors, hearing aid sales people, and fundraisers.  I do not consider call blocking more than a last ditch answer and frankly think that some people seem to be attached to it because they enjoy the duel with the spammers.  Certain web sites also actively feed this, apparently to increase sales of call blockers.

      The “spoofing” of phone numbers is endemic to this criminal enterprise.  Phone spammers are increasingly employing software to change their phone numbers on the fly, evading Nomorobo.  Others also spoof the number by using the area code and local exchange prefix of the recipient’s phone number, making it look like the spam call is a neighbor.  I am considering setting up my phone to block all calls from my local exchange, though that still seems to me like a harsh step.

      That’s what it’s come to: Blocking neighbors from calling each other.  People ignoring all calls except from people they know.  What was that about how technology would make the world a better place?

      A few phone spammers extradited and slapped in prison for 25 years might make a difference.  Our government, unfortunately, is just play-acting at enforcing the law.

       

       

       

      3 users thanked author for this post.
      • #221887

        I have a Comcast landline. Nomorobo works very well for me. I don’t give out my phone number very often unless it’s necessary for service providers with whom I normally do business. My cell phone with a third-tier carrier does not get much if any text or voice spam. I do experience spoofed local exchange marketing or robotic calls. Very few spam voicemails.

        So I would conclude that for me, Nomorobo does work.

        -- rc primak

    • #221327

      True scammers don’t pay attention to the Do-Not-Call Registry, and 99 times out of 100 they don’t provide their REAL caller ID info.  It takes me all of 5 minutes to change my outgoing caller ID to anything I want and the scammers can do the same.

      I have had my number, my wife’s number, and several of my work numbers (contiguous block of 100 DIDs) spoofed by scammers.  I answer the phone, explain to people calling back that it was not me (or my wife or my work) that called them and generally they learn something.

      When the true scammers call me I answer and do my best to make their venture just a little less profitable (if all I get is the $0.019 call connection fee on a robo-dial it is still almost 2 cents less profitable for them).   When I get a live one on the line I keep them on the line as long as possible figuring that’s  XX minutes they won’t be able to try to scam my grandma.  My record is close to 20 minutes and I had them convinced that I was going to be a whale for them – them meaning the caller actually got his boss on the line because they were going to scam me that hard.

      When I got an IRS scam call with a call-back number I disabled my caller ID and called them back… over and over and over and over until they unplugged their MajicJack. (I also researched the number and found out it was owned by MagicJack but MJ doesn’t have any method of reporting abuse to them…)

      I got a call from “The Windows” just last week informing me that my computer was hacked and I need to start by rebooting it…  A few minutes later “The Windows” asked if it was back on and I told him “It’s  r..e..a..l..l..y  s..l..o..w… Is that because of the hackers?” He confirmed that it is probably the hackers making it slow… Another 3 or so minutes later “The Windows” asked what it said on the screen… “It still says ‘Windows is shutting down’.”  Just as I was unmuting “The Windows” to tell him “It says Installing update 1 of 147” but he had enough of me and hung up.

      I hope the reboot kicked out the hackers and they don’t come back. 😉

      • #221484

        Just as I was unmuting “The Windows” to tell him “It says Installing update 1 of 147”

        Good one! That should get rid of any scammer!

        Group "L" (Linux Mint)
        with Windows 10 running in a remote session on my file server
    • #221328

      I use CPR 5000 call blocker on my landline. You can block up to 1500 numbers or area codes. Your phone doesn’t even ring, they are just blocked. I block whole area codes unless there are numbers in that area code I don’t want blocked. This thing works great.

      1 user thanked author for this post.
    • #221340

      dph53: ” “I am sorry, I do not discuss personal matters or arrange any sort of payment with people I do not know over the telephone. Please send me a letter.” <Click/End>

      That is exactly my own approach, and say virtually that to hawkers and even those from what I know are bona fides charities but, how to tell if it is really from them?

      And of late I keep in touch a lot more by email, use my cell phone only in real emergencies and some other special (and rare) occasions keeping it switched off otherwise, and, of late, I have been keeping the land-line phone disconnected as well, and just check now and then to see what I have there, usually when I need to make a phone call myself and notice a warning tone telling me that there is a message waiting. Most of those waiting messages come from weird sounding phone numbers, consist of several seconds of silence, and then click off. My guess is that I am not missing much there. Then there are those left by the credit card advisors calling from unknown numbers, those threatening with lawsuits and the rest of the robocalls’ ocean waves breaking at the shore of my telephone’s number (which I pay the telephone company to keep it unlisted, and I imagine they do just that… Oh what times are these!).

      Not what I would call signs of great technological progress, exactly. But these things are out there now and not going away any time soon: it is clear that, like it or not, we must live, increasingly, in an age of diminishing expectations. Sigh!

      Ex-Windows user (Win. 98, XP, 7); since mid-2017 using also macOS. Presently on Monterey 12.15 & sometimes running also Linux (Mint).

      MacBook Pro circa mid-2015, 15" display, with 16GB 1600 GHz DDR3 RAM, 1 TB SSD, a Haswell architecture Intel CPU with 4 Cores and 8 Threads model i7-4870HQ @ 2.50GHz.
      Intel Iris Pro GPU with Built-in Bus, VRAM 1.5 GB, Display 2880 x 1800 Retina, 24-Bit color.
      macOS Monterey; browsers: Waterfox "Current", Vivaldi and (now and then) Chrome; security apps. Intego AV

    • #221345

      On my Android phone I use Call Blocker by Vlad Lee. It’s set to only allow calls and texts from numbers on my contact list. Everything else goes to voice mail or oblivion. So, far it’s been better than expected. Its log shows all of the bogus calls. I like it a lot and highly recommend that other give it a try.

      GreatAndPowerfulTech

    • #221350

      If I recall correctly, here in the UK a few years ago someone set up a second phone line as a premium rate line, meaning that any caller incurred heavy charges per minute or part thereof. Any spam caller on his normal line was given a plausible excuse and asked to call him on the second line when he would then keep them chatting for as long as possible. He made a lot of money out of it.

      Personally, I’m registered with the Telephone Preference Service which is intended to prevent cold calling and it is highly effective. Very occasionally a spam caller will get through and then I usually spot the slight delay before they start talking and during which I hang up.The irritating ones used to be those that happened at the exact same time every day but they’ve pretty much stopped since unattended automatic dialing was outlawed in the UK.

      1 user thanked author for this post.
    • #221352

      I do pretty much what PKCano wrote.

      I don’t have a land line nor “blocked” numbers on my cell phone.  I simply don’t answer if the caller is not on my contact list.

      It is a waste of my time to engage these callers.  Probably a fallacy to think that I am keeping them busy & thereby not scamming others.

      For giggles I looked at my call log for the last 30 days.  Of the 66 calls, 33 were to or from people on my contact list including voice mail.  The difference is 33 calls from numbers not on my contact list.  The most on one day was five.  Some days I get zero, so it’s not like the average is one a day.

      I’m on the “do not call” list & think that it’s mostly c*** in that there is no agency that wants to be bothered by this so they “tell” us it is used by federal & state agencies.  Perhaps that is a lie.

      So how do they get my number?  The idea that there are nefarious call centers or the like randomly dialing numbers or methodically calling generated numbers seems like a stretch.  There doesn’t seem like that much of a success rate on those phishing scams.  So why bother, sighs, just amazes me.

      Oftentimes the idea occurs to me that comcast sells phone numbers.  They can make money in third party distribution.  They’ve proven to be shady enough to do so by reputation alone.

      I am not open about my contact info.  Don’t subscribe to anything.  Not involved in social media.  Also, I don’t have an abundance of apps on my phone to harvest my number, although that’s not totally out of the question as to a possible source.

      When I sleep I set the blocked calls feature on my Samsung to block all calls & text notifications except those on my contact list.

      Sorta bugs me that we are subjected to this nonsense.  It shouldn’t be like this, shakesfist.

      Win 8.1 (home & pro) Group B, W10/11 Avoider, Linux Dabbler

      1 user thanked author for this post.
      • #221405

        Not all scammers and the robocalls gets to call one’s phone just through random dialing: the ones that ring me, now and then, for example when I am waiting to receive an important call at any moment, the phone rings, I answer and it turns out to be one of those calls, I am always asked (if the caller is a real person) if I am so and so, and some even ask if am living in such and such place, and they get both things right.

        Ex-Windows user (Win. 98, XP, 7); since mid-2017 using also macOS. Presently on Monterey 12.15 & sometimes running also Linux (Mint).

        MacBook Pro circa mid-2015, 15" display, with 16GB 1600 GHz DDR3 RAM, 1 TB SSD, a Haswell architecture Intel CPU with 4 Cores and 8 Threads model i7-4870HQ @ 2.50GHz.
        Intel Iris Pro GPU with Built-in Bus, VRAM 1.5 GB, Display 2880 x 1800 Retina, 24-Bit color.
        macOS Monterey; browsers: Waterfox "Current", Vivaldi and (now and then) Chrome; security apps. Intego AV

      • #221407

        @Oscar

        That’s one of the reasons I don’t take calls from numbers not on my contact list.  They can leave a message if they are legitimate.  No muss, no fuss. 😉

        Edit note:  having said that, there might be an exception where I’m waiting for an important call from someone not on my contact list & I’ll get a robocall.  Few & far between, a rarity.

        Win 8.1 (home & pro) Group B, W10/11 Avoider, Linux Dabbler

    • #221347

      Telekom in Germany allows to whitelist incoming telephone numbers. The interface for this is online. For those who do not know what white-listing means: where a blacklist blocks those numbers you define, a whitelist blocks EVERY number and allows only those that you explicitly define. You can  allow individual numbers, area codes, and cellphone networks.

      My life has become very peaceful since I did this with my fixed line some years ago. The mobile number I never hand out to somebody, with just two very close exceptions. No more polling. No more advertising. No more call centre terror. No more “You won!” cheats. I allowed several individual numbers of friends and family,  my hometown’s area code, and the surrounding area codes as well as all mobile networks (because craftsman use mobiles most of the time, and sometimes there is need for one). Any foreigner from more than maybe 50 km away, cannot reach me via telephone.

      Its paradise. If I get more than two calls per month with this method, I already feel its an unusual  disturbance. 😀

      Marc

      P.S.

      It pays off to be restrictive with your personal data, both telephone number and postal adress. My snail mailbox is almost always empty. The boxes of my neighbours are almost exploding sometimes with adverts. All that paper next clogs the trash can. The less people know your telephone number, the fewer people can annoy you with unwanted calls. Be hesitent, therefore.

      Marc

    • #221355

      I set my Galaxy S8 to “Do Not Disturb” with a setting that allows all my contacts to ring through but anyone who is not on my contact list doesn’t ring the phone, it just goes to “missed calls” and most scammers won’t leave a voicemail ( the exception is the IRS scam which will leave a voicemail ).

      Any legitimate calls will leave a voicemail if they need to talk to me. This plan has been working very well for me for at least 6 months now. As was said earlier, the “Do Not Call” list doesn’t stop the scammers but the “Do Not Disturb” setting works pretty darn good.

      Don't take yourself so seriously, no one else does 🙂
      All W10 Pro at 22H2,(2 Desktops, 1 Laptop).

      1 user thanked author for this post.
    • #221376

      I didn`t do anything .  I have Verizon.  All of a sudden lately when a call comes in many are marked Spam on my caller ID.

    • #221408

      Don’t have a landline.

      On my mobile, I screen calls, if I don’t recognise the number (ie. a contact entry with a name associated), I let it go to voicemail. If they don’t leave a message, it couldn’t have been that important.

      Ignorance is bliss.

      No matter where you go, there you are.

      2 users thanked author for this post.
    • #221457

      I still use a landline.  When I first moved to my current residence years ago, I noticed that I was getting a lot of calls from bill collectors for people I do not know.  I have screened calls for years, but they were filling my answering machine (also the base unit for my cordless phone).  The bundle deal I have with the tel co (also my ISP) comes with call blocking of up to 25 numbers, which I quickly filled (and it had no means to block “out of area” or “unknown” or “RESTRICTED” callers).  After that, I pressed my Win XP laptop (single core Turion) into service as a call-blocker.  It has a built-in dial-up modem with caller ID, so I was able to use a callblocking program to block the entries that could not be blocked by the tel co.  It was never connected to the internet.

      All this time I thought that this farce had to end soon.  I was not going to pay someone else’s bills, no matter how persistent they were.  I wonder how long my number was out of service before being assigned to me?  Once a number is out of service, rather than temporarily disconnected, the bill collectors ought to delete it from their records– the next person who answers that number is not going to be the person they want.

      The weird thing was that I began to get tandem calls on my landline, then when I would not answer, the same caller would call the cell phone from the same reported number.  That means they have to know that my landline is associated with my name, not that of their alleged deadbeat, and that would be how they got the cell number.  Yet they still called…  but I am not a cell phone person, and I very rarely answer it.  It’s very rarely anyone I know.  The thing must have 200 texts and voice mails waiting, but I don’t ever read any of them.  All the people I actually want to call know to use the landline.

      Eventually I got a new cordless phone that has a huge memory for blocking calls, and it now does the task my laptop once did.

      The calls changed over time.  The messages got more and more threatening, with a lot of them going for illegal threats of arrest if I didn’t pay these strangers’ bills right now.  I just deleted each message and blocked the number, and while they can easily spoof another one, I can just as easily block it.  I have tons of room in my block list!

      Eventually, the collection calls finally did taper off and not come roaring back when my number was sold to an even lower bottomfeeder for attempted collection.  Then, though, I started getting all kinds of scam calls, including the Microsoft virus calls.  It looked like the bottomfeeding bill collectors got their revenge by giving my number to scammers.  No matter; they block just like bill collector calls.

      After most of a decade, my landline is quiet except for calls actually for me now.  My cell phone, on the other hand, gets calls from unknown numbers several times a day.  Few people even have that number from me, but somehow one of the bill collectors (or several, perhaps) got ahold of it and tried to reach these people I never met through it, so I guess they gave the scammers that number too.  It’s a cheap prepaid phone that is about ten years old, and it does not have the option to turn ringing off for numbers not in my contact list, nor can I block or assign any of them to a null ring.  I just assigned the entire phone to the quietest ring I have (I can’t use my own ring tone either, and the feature that used to allow me to buy ring tones from them has not worked in 8 years or so), and I don’t ever answer it.  I only have it in case my car breaks down when I am out and about or if my landline is not working.

      After all of this, I pretty much assume that any call from an unknown number is a scam until proven otherwise.

      Dell XPS 13/9310, i5-1135G7/16GB, KDE Neon 6.2
      XPG Xenia 15, i7-9750H/32GB & GTX1660ti, Kubuntu 24.04
      Acer Swift Go 14, i5-1335U/16GB, Kubuntu 24.04 (and Win 11)

    • #221462

      I don’t understand why my NON smart phone did not get a TEXT message from the government.  There is still a good percentage of those over 60 who do not have smart phones primarily because they prefer non-smart ones. Plus, what about phones that were turned off…is the text message waiting for when you first turn on the phone that day (the government sent it in the middle of night for Hawaii especially for us night owls)?

      As for the spam, I have recently read that by EARLY 2019 OVER 50% of all cellular calls will be spam!  (It is currently 31% that is spam).  I have an unlisted and non published (for which I pay a fee each month) landline for over 40 years now.  I plan to buy the new iPhone XR when it is available and I am afraid I won’t be able tolerate the spam as I get VERY LITTLE on my landline and what little I get drives me nuts.  I will be using a prepaid service with an unlocked iPhone and the service doesn’t block spam calls.  In the past, even with the small usage I have had for the non smart cell phone, I have to change the number twice in four years because of spam.

      Given the huge increase in spam that is expected next year, I would continue to refrain from getting an iPhone (would never get an Android phone because my privacy is foremost) except I need it for reasons other than phone calls.  Imagine that!

    • #221465

      I didn’t think so, but the Do Not Call list does make a difference.

      It does not not make a difference. I get more spam call now that I am on the Do Not Call List than when I was not.

    • #221480

      The Do Not Call list is useless. All my numbers are registered and the frequency of nuisance calls is unchanged over an extended period of time, including spikes when some new troll targets my numbers.

      1 user thanked author for this post.
      • #221520

        And so it is having, and paying the telephone company to have an unlisted number. I have been paying for that since I got my current phone number, but the con artists and hawkers that call me know my name and some even my address. I seem to remember that these days, and actually for a number of years now, one can easily buy a CD or DVD with the names and addresses of just about everybody in the country. A sort of super Reverse Telephone Directory. I would not be one bit surprised if this now includes email addresses as well.

        Ex-Windows user (Win. 98, XP, 7); since mid-2017 using also macOS. Presently on Monterey 12.15 & sometimes running also Linux (Mint).

        MacBook Pro circa mid-2015, 15" display, with 16GB 1600 GHz DDR3 RAM, 1 TB SSD, a Haswell architecture Intel CPU with 4 Cores and 8 Threads model i7-4870HQ @ 2.50GHz.
        Intel Iris Pro GPU with Built-in Bus, VRAM 1.5 GB, Display 2880 x 1800 Retina, 24-Bit color.
        macOS Monterey; browsers: Waterfox "Current", Vivaldi and (now and then) Chrome; security apps. Intego AV

        1 user thanked author for this post.
    • #221514

      We got the CPR Call Blocker — now we get maybe 1 or 2 calls a month and we just push the red button to zapp them — which is very satisfying.  Blocked calls never ring. Here is the info but you can even get it from Amazon: https://www.qvc.com/CPR-Call-Blocker-w-6500-Number-Blocking-and-3-Year-Warranty.product.E231630.html.

      Trust me — this is a life changer!

       

    • #221545

      T-Mobile offers Scam ID and Scam Block features for free. https://www.t-mobile.com/news/scam-block

    • #221555

      Currently using the free app Mr. Number (for Android and iPhone) to id calls. Uses cloud-based lists to block or notify caller as spam or suspected spam.

    • #221643

      Spectrum VOIP phone service has an option for NoMoRobo to intercept most spam calls on the first ring.

      To activate the screening, customers must sign on to the Spectrum self service site and select the NoMoRobo option.

    • #221640

      A few months ago I had a message left on the answering machine from someone I knew a little, friend of a friend that I had talked to a few times over a couple of years, that lived nearby. They were livid telling me to never call their house again. I had no idea what it was about as it wasn’t possible that I had called them (landline, no butt dial, etc).

      I ended up talking to my friend to ask if they knew or could find out what was going on as I wasn’t about to call them myself. I was told that they were upset because they said I called them numerous times in a single day. I didn’t even know they had my phone number so I figured there had to be more to the story but never heard anything further.

      Then, a couple of weeks ago, I get a typical spam phone call. I check the caller ID and it says my name and phone number is calling me. Confused. I call the phone company and they tell me they have known about this for about a year. That these spammers are now spoofing real peoples names and numbers and using them to call that local community area. I finally understood that previous odd message as I can only guess that someome was using my spoofed name and number to spam call people and one of them just happened to be someone that recognized my name enough to return the call upset for thinking I was calling them.

      The even sadder part. The phone company could not have cared less. I tried talking to a couple of different people and the best they could offer was to change the number and call local and state government to suggest they try to come up with something to address the spoofing issue. I asked how come the phone company doesn’t lobby on behalf of its customers, since they do so when it is in their interest, and was told that it is up to the customers to contact their representatives. That there was nothing they could do.

      So, now you can’t even trust that some stranger isn’t going to get upset thinking your name and number is spam calling them only to track you down (and who knows what scam they may be running if someone answers). Which is probably easy to do. How long before someone gets threatened, hurt or vandalized before the phone company does something? Can’t be that hard to offer individual means for customers to block mass callers or the phone company to do so.

      2 users thanked author for this post.
      • #221663

        You have demonstrated the second level effect of the first level cold calls that so many of us simply disconnect from. Once you have interacted with the bullpen stooge, or even a well programmed machine ( but I repeat myself), you have verified this number is an authentic number and can be reported as available for non-random spoofing.

        It is just a more specific kind of ID theft.

        1 user thanked author for this post.
        • #221750

          If I ever actually speak to one of those, my opening statement, breaking my initial utter silence, once they have began to explain that they are calling me from… and I can hear a telephone bank in the background, is: “Who are you?” Followed by “What do you want?” Followed by “Not interested!” Followed by “Click! Buzzzzz…” I never actually acknowledge I am the person they are calling. So it’s up to them to figure out if their information on the number they were calling is still correct, or what else is going on with that number.

          Will this help me in any way in the future? I have no idea, but now and then, is a real pleasure to be rude to those that are rude to me from the start, and get totally away with it.

          Ex-Windows user (Win. 98, XP, 7); since mid-2017 using also macOS. Presently on Monterey 12.15 & sometimes running also Linux (Mint).

          MacBook Pro circa mid-2015, 15" display, with 16GB 1600 GHz DDR3 RAM, 1 TB SSD, a Haswell architecture Intel CPU with 4 Cores and 8 Threads model i7-4870HQ @ 2.50GHz.
          Intel Iris Pro GPU with Built-in Bus, VRAM 1.5 GB, Display 2880 x 1800 Retina, 24-Bit color.
          macOS Monterey; browsers: Waterfox "Current", Vivaldi and (now and then) Chrome; security apps. Intego AV

      • #221739

        I’ve gotten calls like that… calls from local phone numbers and names that look legitimate but that I do not recognize.  I’ve looked up the names and found out that they are, in fact, real people living near me, and the phone numbers are the same as the one that reported calling me.  I assumed there was some kind of scam like this going on, where the callers were not truly random strangers as they appear.

        Dell XPS 13/9310, i5-1135G7/16GB, KDE Neon 6.2
        XPG Xenia 15, i7-9750H/32GB & GTX1660ti, Kubuntu 24.04
        Acer Swift Go 14, i5-1335U/16GB, Kubuntu 24.04 (and Win 11)

    • #221645

      So how do they get my number?

      I seem to remember that these days, and actually for a number of years now, one can easily buy a CD or DVD with the names and addresses of just about everybody in the country.

      All companies (ie banks, schools, jobs, cable, telephone etc etc) sell the data to make money. I got a snail mail from a online store saying that since I am client of X bank than I would like to buy these items from them. Another snail letter since that since I applied to this school I would like these magazine to proceed with my education. Only way they got this info is if they bought it. May be they hacked the bank and school and got the info but that would be much worse prediction. There have been other snail mail and phone calls that suggest that companies sell your data to make money.

    • #221776

      Ooma (voice over IP) has blacklisting – several levels of it. Very nice. Very useful. It can just redirect the calls to voicemail and you don’t even have to worry that you missed something important – the important callers likely leave messages. The others generally don’t, not even the robocalls.

      However…

      Note that blacklisting fails to block spoofed phone numbers. You know, those spammers/scammers that make it look like they’re calling from within your exchange? Presumably they make unsuspecting call recipients think someone from their neighborhood is calling them.

      Spoofing caller ID should not be legal, and should be technically disallowed. I imagine that there are reasons that is harder to do than it sounds.

      -Noel

      1 user thanked author for this post.
      • #221785

        I read about some of the arguments against using technical means to block spoofing of caller ID.  One was that if a business contracts with a call center to do (whatever), they want the call center to be able to make calls that look like they come from the client they are representing, so that the person on the receiving end of the call can properly judge the nature of the call before answering (the entire purpose of caller ID).  If a doctor contracts with a service to issue appointment reminder courtesy calls, he wants those calls to appear that they are coming from his office, not the name of the service company which the patient does not recognize.

        I can see the point, but enabling all of this scamming seems a high price to pay for that feature.

        Dell XPS 13/9310, i5-1135G7/16GB, KDE Neon 6.2
        XPG Xenia 15, i7-9750H/32GB & GTX1660ti, Kubuntu 24.04
        Acer Swift Go 14, i5-1335U/16GB, Kubuntu 24.04 (and Win 11)

        2 users thanked author for this post.
    • #222858

      ? says:

      expect many more than the 18 billion spam calls placed in 2017. estimates are that one half of calls placed in 2019 will be spam. i gave up on getting any help from FCC, FTC and carrier long ago. Paul M. Romer (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paul_Romer) stated he did not answer the call from Stockholm this morning informing he has won this year’s Nobel Prize in Economics because “I thought it was another spam call selling an extended car warranty'”

    Viewing 28 reply threads
    Reply To: Patch Lady – 31 days of paranoia – day 3

    You can use BBCodes to format your content.
    Your account can't use all available BBCodes, they will be stripped before saving.

    Your information: