65,000 Complaints Later, Microsoft Files Suit Against Tech Support Scammers 246
MojoKid (1002251) writes Tech support scammers have been around for a long time and are familiar to most Slashdot readers. But last month, the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) announced that it had issued lawsuits against several culprits responsible for tech support scams. Now Microsoft has announced that it too is going after tech support scammers. According to the company, more than 65,000 complaints have been made about tech support scams since May of this year alone. Bogus technicians, pretending to represent Microsoft, call the house offering fake tech support and trick people into paying hundreds of dollars to solve a non-existent issue. If successful in their ruse, the scammer then gains access to a person's computer, which lets them steal personal and financial information and even install malware.
I managed to keep one of these guys on the phone for about 20 minutes while I stumbled through his directions, over and over, "rebooting," pretending to be using Windows, etc; the next one caught on more quickly. Have they called you? If so, how did the call go?
Comment removed (Score:4, Funny)
Re: Edit needed in body of story (Score:4, Funny)
It's perfectly cromulent.
Re:Edit needed in body of story (Score:5, Funny)
Looks like he accidentally his post.
overflow? (Score:2, Funny)
was the magic number 65536?
Re:overflow? (Score:5, Funny)
was the magic number 65536?
That's enough complaints for anybody.
Re:overflow? (Score:4, Interesting)
I understood that reference.
65536 (Score:5, Funny)
Maybe the complaint system only support 2^16 entries?
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Maybe the complaint system only support 2^16 entries?
They must be tracking them in an old version of Excel.
Re: 65536 (Score:5, Insightful)
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Doesn't explain why the US Attorney General, the FTC, or others who presumably are citizen advocates weren't all over this wire fraud, and possible RICO problem.
It shouldn't take litigation by Microsoft to end the problem, as it's a criminal act.
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How many years have we been talking about this. The FTC launches *a few* lawsuits, NOT THE FBI, who handles criminal litigation. Did you even read the summary? WTF.
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You would complain to Microsoft because the scammers introduce themselves as "calling from Windows" or "calling from Microsoft".
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Why it's Microsoft's problem (Score:2)
I don't understand why this is Microsoft's problem. Why would you complain to Microsoft about this and not your attorney general? If someone is selling fake Rolexes on the street, you don't complain to Rolex..
Why it's Microsoft's problem
Because the people being scammed do not have standing before the court to make a claim of fraudulent use of trademark on behalf of Microsoft. Only Microsoft, as holder of the trademark, has the right to make such a claim.
Until Microsoft makes the claim, if it has received even one notification of the fraudulent use of its trademark, subsequent use of its trademark without a complaint by Microsoft can legally constitute tacit permission, and enough of that, and the trademark beco
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Aspirin is a bad example of losing a trademark as Bayer lost the trademark, along with the heroin trademark as part of war reparations after WWI. Aspirin (with a capital A) is still a Bayer trademark here in Canada and quite a few other countries
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A... [wikipedia.org]
Keep them busy. (Score:5, Interesting)
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Re:Keep them busy. (Score:5, Funny)
Dunno, but I managed to keep one on the line for almost an hour before I had to go get my kid from a football game. I even gave clues that I wasn't on windows - he wanted me to start task manager, I brought up top and read him the output. When I got to the Zombie Processes part, I freaked out.
Finally had to go, so I confessed that I had been screwing with him, and felt it was my duty to keep him on the phone as long as possible to keep him from harming someone clueless. He called me a "miserable son of a bitch" and slammed the phone down.
Wish I had some way of recording stuff like this...
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LOL, that's great. Classic "pot calling the kettle black".
I've had many calls from those miserable sons of bitches. The first thing they say is "This is Windows Technical Support. Your computer has a virus." They persist even if I tell them I am running Linux. I've tried telling them to prove it by telling me what my IP address is, and they ignore that too and plow on with their script. When I ask them for their name and phone number so I can call them back is when they usually hang up on me.
What
Re: Keep them busy. (Score:2)
I've started to do this as a minor hobby as well. Now I want to take it a step further and get contact I do to report them. They really don't like giving out a working phone number though.
Next time I get "card services" on the line I want to try reeeally playing the part of genuinely being interested and then suddenly something comes up and I have to go. Perhaps they'll risk it.
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It never ceases to amaze me how someone who is actively scamming you, and knows they're actively scamming you, somehow expects to be treated with respect.
I'm sorry, but do you think you deserve to be treated as anything but a lying sack of shit?
It isn't possible to run this scam without knowing you're scamming. So if you don't get a good response, you shouldn't be surprised at all.
Don't care if it's the only job you can find. You know y
Re:Keep them busy. (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Keep them busy. (Score:5, Interesting)
"You need to send me $10,000 if you want your life back."
Me: What? "If you ever want to see your stuff again, you'll have to pay me $10,000."
Me: Really? Why not $15k? My stuff is worth more than that. [hangup]
These calls can get pretty spooky. There's obviously an American presence which deal with the victims once the trap has sprung. Reverse number lookup on a land line gives them your home address. I don't recommend taunting criminals.
I now just say "I know about the scam. You should find a better job." I used to get 3-4 a month. I now get them only a few times a year.
Re: Keep them busy. (Score:3)
This guy is an inspiration when dealing with the scammers:
Best Prank Call Ever by Tom Mabe: http://youtu.be/rBfsdkGeMc8 [youtu.be]
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My list so far:
1. "Your computer has been sending us error messages". "Which computer? I have several". "All of them" "The same message?" "Yes, sir". "That's impossible, they don't all use the same operating system, so which one?" "All of them, sir" and so ad nauseam.
2. "Can you turn on your computer, sir". "I can't". "Why is that, sir". "I have a broken leg and I am in bed and can't reach my computer" You could hear the script pages flipping while they searched for a response.
3. "Windows button? Oh, I use
Once a week forever (Score:3)
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Scammers aren't going to stop calling you or remove you from their phone list.
Re:Once a week forever (Score:4, Insightful)
Smart scammers (but not these ones) would stop, as they are only wasting their own time calling someone they already know will not fall for their pitch.
Although that seems obvious, quite a lot of legitimate businesses, charities, politicians, etc., have quite a bit of trouble understanding it.
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I didn't say they weren't legal, I said they weren't effective in their goal.
Re:Once a week forever (Score:4, Insightful)
That way any sales call in itself would be a felony if that special prefix is not displayed clearly.
Hey! We could stop crime by passing a law to make it illegal! That would definitely keep those criminals from calling.
Bonus points for going directly to making this a felony. I'm bothered by the stench of my neighbors' preparing fish head stew. Can that be a felony, too? What about if they paint their front door red? I hate that.
Rather than pointlessly inflating the number of felonies in this country, I suggest that you instead obtain a Google Voice number and start giving that out instead of your real number. With GV, you can mark callers as spammers and they will get a "number disconnected" tone if they call back. You can also block people so they go straight to voicemail while others ring through.
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This. I work at a telecom company, and we just got a new area code allocated in my area recently. People are getting virgin phone numbers that have never been used, and we've already had them calling asking for new numbers because they're getting so many scam and junk calls.
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It won't work. They are war dialing all of North America.
Works just fine for me, and I perceive no reason it wouldn't work for others. Do you wish to restate your objection?
I have never given out either of my last two real phone numbers. Hell, I don't even know what my current "real" phone number is. I get zero calls on it. If I ever were to get such a call, I wouldn't answer. In fact, if I don't recognize the number I let it ring through to voicemail or use GV screening to decide whether to answer it as the caller leaves their message.
For all intents and purpose
I have a fun time with these calls (Score:2)
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Used #5 myself - another 'The New Age' fan.
My wife has used the "But, we don't have any computers in the house. Phones? Yes, we've got one of those, with the dial that spins around."
I've also used the "There's a pop-up window. It says "Navigation to this site has been blocked. This site contains malicious software. What does that mean?"
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But most of the time I run out of patience before them and then go 'may I ask a question?' :
Are your parents proud to have a criminal in the family?
The last Asian became very irritated and started calling me names, mission accomplished :)
my father-in-law handles these calls (Score:5, Funny)
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It's Lenny [youtube.com]
Amateurs (Score:2)
If they scam people for a living, I can't understand why they don't try harder. They 'Microsoft' people have to be the most transparent, obvious, and pathetic scams out there, which is saying a lot.
On second thought, except for the part about trying to 'help' the user, they actually are believable as employees of Microsoft.
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> They 'Microsoft' people have to be the most transparent, obvious, and pathetic scams out there, which is saying a lot.
It costs time and money to _execute_ a more sophisticated attack. And the low investment in these calls means it can be executed in a a low cost clal center which is basically a sweat shop of employees who will, in their turn be ripped off by their employers. Also, the poor quality of the scam helps focus the scam on those easiest to victimize.
I'm afraid that, in that sense, it's much
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It does not cost anything to simply refrain from some of the most blatant lies. They lie because that's simply the kind of failed human beings that they are, even though it actually hurts their chances of success.
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> It does not cost anything to simply refrain from some of the most blatant lies. They lie because that's simply the kind of failed human beings that they are, even though it actually hurts their chances of success.
I'm afraid that deception doesn't have to be _good_ to be profitable, or to aid in survival. It only has to be _good enough_. And the blatant lies can be most effective on the most vulnerable people, the least educated, and the least likely to stop halfway through the "support call".
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I've read articles (about spam, but this is similiar) that talk about how they don't *want* it to be especially believable. It's harder for them to try to be believable and have smart people drop out as soon as they realize it's a scam. On the other hand, if they're blatantly obvious, the people they manage to net will likely be the most gullible and most likely to actually follow through with a scam.
No, They Haven't Called Me (Score:3, Informative)
Re:No, They Haven't Called Me (Score:5, Interesting)
Until a local hospital calls you to let you know your kids got a broken leg...
Re:No, They Haven't Called Me (Score:4, Insightful)
Until a local hospital calls you to let you know your kids got a broken leg...
I've seen people drive themselves to distraction with your logic. They start sweating when their phone gets to one bar, and refuse to go anywhere with no cell service. Or drive through long highway tunnels. And yet....... somehow we've been able to survive all this time without everyone having instant access to us.
Talk about your first world problems.
Re: (Score:2)
Re:No, They Haven't Called Me (Score:4, Interesting)
We've also seen a sharp decrease in infantile mortality rates, disease spread, disease mortality, and much more besides in the past few decades. So aside from your fairly obvious strawman (not wanting to drive through long tunnels, really?),
Yes, really. A passenger in a car I was driving pulled out his phone going through the Squirrel Hill tunnel near Pittsburgh and was nervous about it for the short time we were in the tunnel. Another got very nervous while driving through Northern PA, and actually wanted me to pull over so he could hop outside the car to check to see if he could get a signal that way. Another stood on the roof of his car trying to get s sign. Just in case.
You'll be glad the person who sees you get into a car crash has a cellphone on them.
Especially when they were texting and the cause of the accident
Which is also part of my smartphones as an addiction jeremiad. Do you deny that it is a dangerous thing to text and drive? Anyone who TWD's puts their life and others at real risk every time they are doing it. But they think it is okay, and important, otherwise they wouldn't do it. Deny that is an addiction - it is electronic meth.
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The hospital will leave a &^*(^&$ message. A scammer/telemarketer/politician ... will not. I don't answer any calls not on my phone list. If it is not important enough to leave a message, It is not important enough for me to answer. My cell phone is for my convenience, not yours. Thank you.
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Until a local hospital calls you to let you know your kids got a broken leg...
And yet....... somehow we've been able to survive all this time without everyone having instant access to us.
Talk about your first world problems.
All the time "we" have been around (unless you or me are >70 yo) there have been phones. And back when there were not, hospitals were localised enough for one to have sent a runner or despatched a telegram for hand delivery to where you lived if things were life threatening. They did that sort of thing in those days.
Stop feeling guilty about the First World. Nothing to stop a runner being sent in the Third World (who largely have cell phones these days anyway).
Re:No, They Haven't Called Me (Score:5, Informative)
Until a local hospital calls you to let you know your kids got a broken leg...
I've seen people drive themselves to distraction with your logic. They start sweating when their phone gets to one bar, and refuse to go anywhere with no cell service. Or drive through long highway tunnels. And yet....... somehow we've been able to survive all this time without everyone having instant access to us.
Talk about your first world problems.
First world problems? If you've never been to the 3rd world, you're not allowed to use that line. It just makes you sound like an idiot.
I've been to the 3rd world, specifically Africa. Everyone has cellphones. EVERYONE.
People that don't have homes, cars, a bed... have a cellphone.
Why? So they can keep in contact with their family, in case of emergency. Most people have 2 phones, or at least 2 sim cards so they can be on 2 networks at once, just so they don't miss a call.
You find booths like this on every street corner:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M... [wikipedia.org]
I had better cell coverage there than I do in the states.
Re: (Score:2)
Why does it have to be one extreme or the other?
Can't I have a phone in case someone wants go get through, and then not give a crap if I don't have it on me?
I agree with the GP. What's the point of having a phone or even giving out a phone number if you don't want to be contactable? But what's the point of going into a panic without it?
My girlfriend does something equally silly. She flat out doesn't answer private numbers. So one day I was stuck in the bush, zero phone reception, and I found at some lion cl
Re: (Score:2)
Why does it have to be one extreme or the other?
Can't I have a phone in case someone wants go get through, and then not give a crap if I don't have it on me?
Not one extreme or the other is the preferable mode of operation. At home, I see the number calling, and if it isan 800 service number or if it is unidentified, it doesn't get answered, and any number I pick up that doesn't have a voice within a second gets blocked - those are robocalls.
On my smartphone, only a few people have that number anyhow, and I'm not a phone/text/check my facebook addict, so that's no issue.
I agree with the GP. What's the point of having a phone or even giving out a phone number if you don't want to be contactable? But what's the point of going into a panic without it?
I really don't know why anyone would go into a panic. Perhaps it's a weird spinoff of th e
Re: (Score:3)
So they can leave a voice mail along the lines of, "This is NAME at HOSPITAL, please call us at your earliest convenience as we have someone here who has listed you as a point of contact."
Then when you get out of that long highway tunnel and can pull over you can check your voice mail and go to the hospital.
You don't NEED to be instantly accessible, there is nothing wrong with being QUICKLY accessible.
Re:No, They Haven't Called Me (Score:4, Informative)
Taking that logic to the extreme we survived without electricity too.
Not my point. trying to take my point to the extreme would be saying someone panics if they can't see a functional electrical outlet.
I mean seriously, I've had more than one occasion where a person has become very antsy because we were in an area with no cell coverage while traveling. "What if someone needs to get hold of me?"
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"Back in the day", if a loved one was in a life threatening accident, and the hospital only had your home phone number, and you were not home, guess what? You missed out on your one chance to say goodbye to that person. With the advent of cell phones, there is now a chance to get to the hospital in time.
Jesus man, I feel sorry for you. What if you are across the country? What if you are in a meeting where you are not allowed to take a phone? What if they die before you get there after being alerted by phone so you should stay with them at all times? You are the perfect example of the modern phone addict.
And I do not know anyone paranoid enough to restrict their travel by how many bars of signal strength they have.
In my job, I would often spend time out of cell phone range, either on ships, or in meetings where I could not take a phone.
Would you do this job? what if a family member was in the hospital dying while y
Re: (Score:2)
My best was 45 minutes (Score:5, Funny)
before I got bored. He, and his "supervisor of tech support" was already spitting mad so when I thanked him for playing the fool and provide me with some laughs it pushed him over the edge. My shtick is to pretend to be an elderly man, who off course has trouble hearing so they have to s p e l l r e a l s l o w l y and i still mess it up, have them explain the internet (isn't it that cable thingy that I plug in the wall? You want me to disconnect it?) all while obviously being vey very worried about them virus things. I've seen them talk about it on TV. Is it like Ebola? I don't want to get that.Of course none of his instructions worked because I don't use Windows.
The trick is to appear complaint while being confused and incompetent. The couple of times he doubted my old age gimmick I thanked him and joked the ladies tell me that as well.
Re: (Score:3)
Next time they call I plan on acting amazed that my new computer can tell it's infected even before I inbox it. I then intend to see if I can get them to walk me (an idiot, of course) through putting it together so I can let them "help" fix it.
Here's hoping it kills an hour or more of their time :)
Re: (Score:2)
Next time they call I plan on acting amazed that my new computer can tell it's infected even before I inbox it. I then intend to see if I can get them to walk me (an idiot, of course) through putting it together so I can let them "help" fix it.
Here's hoping it kills an hour or more of their time :)
Remember - your goal is to get them to think their is money at the end of the conversation. The more the talk, the more they've invested in the con and the more likely they are going to keep trying to get your CC number. Let them think they are in control of the situation.
Re: (Score:2)
I made it close to two hours once, while working at the same time. I speak french and they don`t speak it very well thus it was perhaps easier than you to keep them hooked up. He was quite angry when he understood he had been played all along. I hoped that saved a few people from getting caught by that scheme!
Tip of the hat, monsieur.
Laughing at them as they scream is a nice reward; I also hope it makes them more likely to dump a real mark, thinking they are being played, when the victim takes too long to con or isn't moving fast enough.
25-30 computers (Score:4, Insightful)
Re: (Score:3)
They tried to get around that one by saying that the computer was the one on 192.168.0.something.
Which presumably fools a lot of people, because so many home NAT devices are set to use that IP range on the LAN side, and that they got the first three numbers right might just convince the less savvy.
One even asked me for my IP address so he could check it out better. Sure - it is fda7:60a9:2fd3:3::57 - hope that helps!
These days, I tell them to e-mail you the contact information and you'll get back to them.
A more important issue... (Score:5, Funny)
If automakers built cars that crashed as often as all the versions of Windows, the earth's population would be about 1,000 people today.
Re: (Score:2)
There's very few companies you wouldn't be able to sue if you could sue for that. Heck, Linux is very stable if you use "the good parts" and set it up just the right way, but get out of its comfort zone (ie: start using it on the desktop with a setup thats not the "ONE" setup) and things go to hell pretty quick.
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I've used Linux for longer than that...I can't think you are doing much with it. I've crashed linux plenty of times, just like I've crashed Windows plenty of times. All comes down to hardware. If you have bad hardware (like ram), the system will crash. If you have good hardware, it will stay up.
To that point, I've been running WinXP and Win7 for years now, on good hardware, and not a single BSOD.
And my linux systems don't crash when running on good hardware either.
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Re: (Score:2)
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"the only time you have to play with video drivers under Linux is with any consumer grade discrete card that matters".
Is basically what you just said.
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As what? You certainly cant use it as a video driver. There are more kinds of wierdness than a ghost train, and it often prevents the machine from booting at all.
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Clearly, you never read the EULA, or even the Warranty statement.
Microsoft only promises that it will work as intended for the first 90 days after it's installed. After 90 days, if Microsoft decides to tell you to piss off, you're SOL, because the software is presented to you AS-IS.
During the warranty period, if you have a problem, Microsoft will, AT THEIR SOLE DISCRETION, either refund the money you paid for the software (if you actually paid anything for it. If it came preinstalled on your computer, you
Ouch (Score:3, Funny)
the next one caught on my quickly
That must've stung.
Dilbert's Scott Adams: Hard to Distinguish MS/Scam (Score:2)
Boring Little Story About My Windows [dilbert.com]
Re:Dilbert's Scott Adams: Hard to Distinguish MS/S (Score:4, Interesting)
Boring Little Story About My Windows [dilbert.com]
Right... and that's why you always pirate windows.
It's sad that the pirated version of an OS is better than the legit version, but with windows it's a fact.
Sporting (Score:3)
Is it me, or has wasting the time of these asshole scammers become a rather popular sport among IT folks?
I personally jacked one around for about 30 minutes. The best part was at the end, when I told him my hobby was murdering cows for no good reason. Dude got PISSED.
I got a call (Score:5, Funny)
All the trademarks. Middle of the day, thick Indian accent, said he was from Microsoft support, said there was a problem.
He really was. He was calling me about a ticket I had opened with Azure support. Go figure.
OT: Jehovah's witnesses once hung up on me (Score:3)
Re:OT: Jehovah's witnesses once hung up on me (Score:5, Funny)
Re: (Score:2)
A friend and his wife once made super cookies in the form of "666' and served them up with cans of ice-cold Coke. The Mormon missionaries looked at each other and said "they sensed a spirit of confrontation" and left. They died laughing after they left. They never received additional visits.
A missionary friend of mine would have politely thanked them for the "999" cookies, and then spent as long as they'd tolerate talking about the LDS church. It's wrong to point at religious people, and claim that they have no sense of humor about themselves.
Re: (Score:2)
I got a death threat (Score:5, Interesting)
The person who called me didn't get far because I told him right away that I know it's a scam.
Then he threatened to kill me and my family. That was a little unsettling.
From 800-642-7676 (Score:3, Interesting)
Scammer: We have detected a denial of service attack launched from your IP address. You need to follow our instructions right now or all of your billing information will be all over the web.
Me: How did you find all of this out?
Scammer: The Microsoft security server flagged your computer as launching a DOS attack on the Whitehouse web site and then began sending out your credit card information to a torrent. There is no doubt that your identity is being hacked. Check your bank account to see if there are any transactions not authorized by you.
Me: So you work for Microsoft?
Scammer: Yes. This is Microsoft support. That's how we know that your computer has been compromised.
Me: You are not. You are a f*n scammer! I don't even have a windows computer on my network.
Scammer: Well, it is your IP address that is originating the DOS attack. What operating system do you run?
Me: Fedora 20 Heisenbug development release.
Scammer: That may be why. There is a vulnerability in the latest development release of Fedora that would allow attackers to do exactly what your computer is doing now. Your identity is being broadcast all over the Internet as we speak. Can you halt your computer?
Me: Let me take a look at the network traffic first.
Scammer: ...
Me: Wireshark shows no incoming or outgoing traffic that is out of the ordinary.
Scammer: That's what I am trying to tell you. The vulnerability sends the packets using the raw network interface so you will not see the packets in any traffic captures.
Me: Wait one second! I know the network stack in Fedora backwards and forwards. Traffic is captured from the Ethernet interface just before it is shipped out over the wire.
Scammer: The exploit actually replaces the Ethernet driver. What you are seeing is what the hacker wants you to see and no more. If you aren't going to shut down your computer, I will! Give me the root password!
Me: lol
My standard response . . . (Score:2)
"Does your mother know what you do for a living? Do you think she would be proud?"
Good luck trying to get resolution. (Score:5, Insightful)
Most of these are little sweatshop ops out of India, China and Eastern Europe.
Microsoft can scream at the FTC all damn day. These guys, if caught, just uproot, disappear, and come back under another business name, registering new phone numbers, etc.
Not so much (Score:2)
Bullshit (Score:4, Funny)
This place reads like a combination of Penthouse Letters, Soldier of Fortune, and Byte magazine.
I use a Mac (Score:2)
thank you for playing *CLICK*
Call redirect (Score:3, Funny)
I used to get these calls. They kept calling from the same number, so I set up a redirect on my VOIP system that routed their calls to the FBI office in my state capitol. My logs showed they chatted for just over thee minutes!
Some answers to the know-it-all comments: (Score:5, Informative)
To figure out who to sue, you have to participate in the scam long enough to have an actual transaction processed and then follow the money -- but that's not so simple now. Most of these particular kinds of scams don't accept payment at the telecenter you're talking to. They just install the ransomware on the pc. Then once you're already compromised you have to pay someone else -- through a web site, a wire payment, or some other mechanism that's much easier to hide than just a credit card transaction.
My Records (Score:4, Interesting)
...so far is 3 hrs 49 min.
Re: (Score:3)
4 days 15 hours.
I took a call on my landline, it was a blatant Windows scam, so I put him on hold. Went off on a road trip (Brighton or it might have been Cardiff), came back and saw I'd left the phone off the hook and the hold light was STILL blinking. Same operator was on the line!
Turned out, he and one of his colleagues had taken shifts waiting for me to come back since I'd taken the trouble to put them on hold, at which point I came clean and told them I was running NetBSD.
Why not blame the phone company? (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3)
You are subscribing, thus get a bill. They do not subscribe to your carrier. They call in from a peer, often VOIP such as Magic Jack with invalid location data.
VOIP service other than consumer packaged plans permit users to set their own CID info. For example, I can enter my 800 number for call backs.
Commercial lines are different from home lines where the in and out line is one and the same.
I have a DID Direct Inward Dial number. It can't call out.
I also have several trunk lines. They can call out, b
Your Windows Computer has a Virus (Score:2)
SCAMMER: We have detected that the Windows computer running on your network has a virus.
ME: [lie] I only run Linux.
SCAMMER: [click]. . . [dial tone]
Goatse (Score:3)
For those who are fairly new around here, it was an old meme - a picture of
preying on stupid people (Score:2)
no mercy.
Reminded me of an old project (Score:2)
I got one of those calls the other day. Oh I was ecstatic ready to play the game. Then I realized I had dinner to make and the kids were hungry so I cut it short. I did get him to yell and hang up rudely - score. Then I remembered why didn't I finish that FreePBX project to block these telemarketers...
I had a few calls from these scammers (Score:2)
The first call I had from a scammer claiming to help me with a virus I strung along for a while. I told him I had six computers running Windows, I just needed him to tell me which one he was calling about. I don't remember how he reacted to that but I do remember him asking me to write down a very long number to verify something. After I started to run out of space on the scrap of paper I was scribbling this number onto I stopped him and asked him what this number was for. At that point he got frustrate