Home › Forums › Other › OT: How to combat a repetitive scam phone call from “Windows Technical Support”
- This topic has 24 replies, 13 voices, and was last updated 9 years, 5 months ago by Doofrat.
-
AuthorPosts
-
July 6, 2015 at 9:01 PM #21591July 6, 2015 at 9:21 PM #787750spdrunParticipant
Caller ID might be random — a VoIP PBX can be set up to transmit virtually any caller ID info to the provider. Honestly, just ignore it. Unless you know the number, don’t pick up.
Or test the ability of their VoIP to transmit high-amplitude signals. If you’re lucky, you might even give one of their smurfs a coronary.
July 6, 2015 at 9:27 PM #787751CoronitaParticipantI know how these scams work. What they do is they try to convince people to give them remote share access to your computer, and then try to scam you out of money or mess up your system and than ask you to pay. I’m thinking of setting of a virtual instance and while they are trying to f up my virtual instance, try to trace back their ip address…..I wonder how hard that would be to do…
July 7, 2015 at 5:10 AM #787752spdrunParticipantStick the honeypot behind a firewall that logs all traffic and you should be able to get the IP. I’m not sure what their local constabulary would do with it, though.
July 7, 2015 at 8:38 AM #787754livinincaliParticipant[quote=spdrun]I’m not sure what their local constabulary would do with it, though.[/quote]
They can’t be bothered. They’re busily planning their next drug raid with the new surplus military hardware they just got.
July 7, 2015 at 8:44 AM #787755spdrunParticipantThe scammmers are likely not in the US 🙂
July 7, 2015 at 9:04 AM #787756allParticipantTell them you don’t run Windows?
July 7, 2015 at 9:07 AM #787757spdrunParticipantBut getting an IP to be able to DDoS or otherwise fawk with at your leisure might be worth it.
July 7, 2015 at 9:20 AM #787758bibsoconnerParticipantIt may not be worth your time, but I wonder if this is a money making opportunity? You say they are consistently calling. Can you record them (you have to inform them that you are recording) or at least log the calls. You could put it on speaker phone so someone in your home can be a witness that the call happened. Tell them each time to remove you from the list. There is supposed to be agencies to deal with “do not call” violations. A few that came up with a Google search
https://www.fcc.gov/encyclopedia/do-not-call-list
https://complaints.donotcall.gov/complaint/complaintcheck.aspx
http://ag.ca.gov/donotcall/dnc_complaint.phpI’ve never gotten consistent calls (after I told them to take me off the list), so I’ve never been in a position to make money, but perhaps you can!
I’ve gotten the Windows Technical Support call a few (<5) random times. So far I've just had fun with it by having them quote prices and then telling them I have nothing but Linux (not true) or my favorite, asking, "I don't have any Windows machines, but can I pay you some money anyhow?"
Good luck.
DaveJuly 7, 2015 at 9:40 AM #787761CoronitaParticipant[quote=all]Tell them you don’t run Windows?[/quote]
Already did that, and they hung up and called back the next day.
July 7, 2015 at 9:45 AM #787762CoronitaParticipant[quote=bibsoconner]It may not be worth your time, but I wonder if this is a money making opportunity? You say they are consistently calling. Can you record them (you have to inform them that you are recording) or at least log the calls. You could put it on speaker phone so someone in your home can be a witness that the call happened. Tell them each time to remove you from the list. There is supposed to be agencies to deal with “do not call” violations. A few that came up with a Google search
https://www.fcc.gov/encyclopedia/do-not-call-list
https://complaints.donotcall.gov/complaint/complaintcheck.aspx
http://ag.ca.gov/donotcall/dnc_complaint.phpI’ve never gotten consistent calls (after I told them to take me off the list), so I’ve never been in a position to make money, but perhaps you can!
I’ve gotten the Windows Technical Support call a few (<5) random times. So far I've just had fun with it by having them quote prices and then telling them I have nothing but Linux (not true) or my favorite, asking, "I don't have any Windows machines, but can I pay you some money anyhow?"
Good luck.
Dave[/quote]They aren't based in the U.S. It sounds like the people running this scam are using a call center out of India (and I don't mean this in any disrespect to folks from India), but I was able to trick one "agent" into giving me a callback number, and it was an international number based in India.
It's just annoying that my phone rings late at night for the past few days...I guess I can turn off the ringer.
I'm going to try to snag one of their ip addresses. Unfortunately, I'm not a hacker type... If I were evil, I might be compelled to try to unlease a virus or two on THEIR systems.
July 7, 2015 at 10:35 AM #787763plmParticipantHad the same problem a couple of years ago. Wife almost fell for it. Good thing she called me before she gave the credit card number. Anyhow they just will not stop calling. I’m guessing it was because they got close. Good thing was their caller id number even though it wasn’t a real phone number was the same each time. Our cordless phone has a way to block phone numbers and that fixed the problem once I blocked it. Perhaps yours does as well? Drove me crazy until I figured out how to block it.
July 7, 2015 at 5:41 PM #787769DoofratParticipantHere’s what I do to avoid this. I’m on call pretty much all the time, so I can’t just turn off the ringer on my iPhone. So when I would get a call with some Pakistani saying a bu daba or something like that at 3am it would really piss me off.
What I do is record ten seconds of silence then add it to my iTunes library. You can then convert this to AAC in iTunes (There are a bunch of articles on how to do this for different platforms, or you can just buy a silent ringtone for 99cents). You then set this silent ringtone as your default ringtone and set all your contacts with non-default ringtones. Your phone will never again ring unless it’s from somebody you know. If it’s important enough, they can still leave a message. I hate to say it, but I even have a family member on the silent ringtone since they forget they are in a different time zone and sometimes call at 7am on a Saturday.
The only issue is that any time you update your iPhone, it removes the silent ringtone for some reason, but it’s pretty easy to set up again.July 7, 2015 at 5:58 PM #787770joecParticipantNot sure why you keep picking up, but whenever I get a call from anyone, I just put it on auto-ignore on my phone and my phone doesn’t even ring anymore for those people…Honestly, I’d probably move on to “white” lists soon and just delete all emails and phone calls from numbers I don’t know.
Also, I screen all my calls so in general, I don’t waste my time or pick up anything unless it’s from a number I know…(and even then, I don’t answer a lot of times)…
Just too many scammers (like your front door) that you’re better off just ignoring all of it IMO.
July 7, 2015 at 10:36 PM #787776HatfieldParticipantMy brother gets these calls all the time. Sometimes he toys with them, sometimes he berates them for not getting into an honest line of work. He think that some of them actually have no idea what they’re doing, they just work in a call center and are working off a script. If you take them off script they’re totally lost.
-
AuthorPosts
- You must be logged in to reply to this topic.