I'm going with this option if it gets too bad.
I'm going with this option if it gets too bad.
Might as well add this story to the thread.
Yesterday a telephone call comes in. Caller ID indicates it's from a phone in my village with a common name like Bill Smith. Someone I don't know. I hesitate but decide to pick it up. I say hello.
The person on the other end of the line has a very thick Indian accent. Much thicker than the folks Apple and others hire. So it doesn't take a genius to realize he's spoofed the number.
His first sentence is about the health crisis.
Yeah, right, a neighbor with a classic American name is calling me from a local number, has a thick accent, the sound of other operators in the background, and is talking about the coronavirus.
I interrupt him and ask in a loud, annoyed voice, "IS THIS ANOTHER SCAM".
There's a pause of 2 seconds and then he meekly says, "No,o,o". I hang up.
What an awfully designed scam.
But I realize now that I should have let him continue so I could hear the scam but I was just too pissed. Be careful people. Not only do we have to keep our social distance, now we have to beware of awful people pulling scams on the phone, using the current health crisis and fear to rip us off.
Jim
I wish I understood everything I know.
There is some considerable logic in having these spam emails and phone calls be obviously (to us, anyway) clumsy.
Even though it costs virtually nothing to dial a million numbers, the sell-through rate, if you will, is so low that they have an enormous incentive to filter out no-sales so that they can focus on the stupid/gullible, where they do have a chance of a sale. So it costs them nothing if the attempt is transparently clumsy; in fact, it helps. If you want to screw up their business model and have a couple of minutes to burn, stay on the line and engage the caller. That time is coming out of the scammer's bottom line.
Pro tip: When you are at the pharmacy or Best Buy, buying the gift cards that they tell to buy, be sure to maintain the 2-meter social distance from the sucker - I mean customer - in front of you.
John Nesbitt
ex-Swift DB-1
Attempt at humor alert...
Covid-19 is a biological weapon released by the youngest members of SCCA to take out the Boomers.
New rules to be implemented. A class for each individual racer to guarantee a First place trophy for all participants.
No trophies will be available trackside due to the vast number needed. Gift cards for the local trophy shop will be given upon registration.
Smile ! It's good for you !
"An analog man living in a digital world"
I've recently created a new means to add to my stress-reduction warehouse.
If I miss such calls, I call back.
In best cases, they answer:
"Hello"
"Hello"
"Hello"
"Hello"
"I can't hear you, but if you can hear me, please call back. I think we have a bad connection."
A minute later, lather, rinse, repeat.
I only waste (their) time doing this if I'm batching photos, backing up files, waxing the van, waxing the dog, trimming my nose, fitting a new onesie, or otherwise not costing my time more than a run down a drag strip.
PS -- I don't have a onesie
Last edited by E1pix; 03.18.20 at 12:53 PM.
Did your call cover that blown engine?
Yes on local numbers. I had a hundred numbers blocked before realizing one was mine!
My wife scolded me for musing that maybe in a few months I can pick up some deals at estate sales. Then it struck me that I just got my 30-year SCCA pin and I'm a couple of year over the "danger age" for COVID. Oh crap, it could be MY estate sale!
And then something else struck me.
My wife.
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