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Letting off steam



 
 
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  #1  
Old April 15th 18, 02:45 AM posted to rec.photo.digital
PeterN[_7_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 1,161
Default Letting off steam

For the forth time this week I got a phone call from a telephone that
spoofs the telephone number of an Apple store.

They give me a number to call, which does not compare with any
legitimate Apple number. I have reported this phony number to Apple.

Letting off steam.
--
PeterN
  #2  
Old April 15th 18, 02:53 AM posted to rec.photo.digital
nospam
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 24,165
Default Letting off steam

In article , PeterN
wrote:

For the forth time this week I got a phone call from a telephone that
spoofs the telephone number of an Apple store.


was it emily (or whatever her name is this week) from the hotel resort?

They give me a number to call, which does not compare with any
legitimate Apple number. I have reported this phony number to Apple.


there's nothing apple or anyone else can realistically do. the calls
are almost certainly coming from outside the usa, and it's only going
to get worse.
  #3  
Old April 15th 18, 06:18 AM posted to rec.photo.digital
android
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 3,854
Default Letting off steam

On 2018-04-15 01:53:09 +0000, nospam said:

In article , PeterN
wrote:

For the forth time this week I got a phone call from a telephone that
spoofs the telephone number of an Apple store.


was it emily (or whatever her name is this week) from the hotel resort?

They give me a number to call, which does not compare with any
legitimate Apple number. I have reported this phony number to Apple.


there's nothing apple or anyone else can realistically do. the calls
are almost certainly coming from outside the usa, and it's only going
to get worse.


Well, spam of all sorts are getting weirder and weirder. I get messages
like this: "Big girl banged in big cock video" xxx "gives her boyfriend
a handjob in class Check this video out" Link!

And I clicked one of those once using an Anonymizer and got a blank
page! I can only assume that I'm probed to find out my potential
weaknesses and that the attack on me kingdom could be, or not be
imminent!
--
teleportation kills

  #4  
Old April 15th 18, 11:24 AM posted to rec.photo.digital
nospam
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 24,165
Default Letting off steam

In article , android
wrote:

For the forth time this week I got a phone call from a telephone that
spoofs the telephone number of an Apple store.


was it emily (or whatever her name is this week) from the hotel resort?

They give me a number to call, which does not compare with any
legitimate Apple number. I have reported this phony number to Apple.


there's nothing apple or anyone else can realistically do. the calls
are almost certainly coming from outside the usa, and it's only going
to get worse.


Well, spam of all sorts are getting weirder and weirder. I get messages
like this: "Big girl banged in big cock video" xxx "gives her boyfriend
a handjob in class Check this video out" Link!


not on the phone, you haven't.
  #5  
Old April 15th 18, 11:58 AM posted to rec.photo.digital
android
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 3,854
Default Letting off steam

On 2018-04-15 10:24:51 +0000, nospam said:

In article , android
wrote:

For the forth time this week I got a phone call from a telephone that
spoofs the telephone number of an Apple store.

was it emily (or whatever her name is this week) from the hotel resort?

They give me a number to call, which does not compare with any
legitimate Apple number. I have reported this phony number to Apple.

there's nothing apple or anyone else can realistically do. the calls
are almost certainly coming from outside the usa, and it's only going
to get worse.


Well, spam of all sorts are getting weirder and weirder. I get messages
like this: "Big girl banged in big cock video" xxx "gives her boyfriend
a handjob in class Check this video out" Link!


not on the phone, you haven't.


Done what?
--
teleportation kills

  #6  
Old April 16th 18, 06:52 PM posted to rec.photo.digital
PeterN[_7_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 1,161
Default Letting off steam

On 4/14/2018 9:53 PM, nospam wrote:
In article , PeterN
wrote:

For the forth time this week I got a phone call from a telephone that
spoofs the telephone number of an Apple store.


was it emily (or whatever her name is this week) from the hotel resort?

They give me a number to call, which does not compare with any
legitimate Apple number. I have reported this phony number to Apple.


there's nothing apple or anyone else can realistically do. the calls
are almost certainly coming from outside the usa, and it's only going
to get worse.


So you are saying that the number they ask me to call cannot be traced?
According to one of my friends, who was an engineer with the original
AT&T, and another friend who is retired from a TLOF agency, just about
any number can be traced, though some with more difficulty than other's.

I also heard some horror stories about some who were naive enough to
either press the requested button, or call the number they ask you to call.

--
PeterN
  #7  
Old April 16th 18, 08:10 PM posted to rec.photo.digital
nospam
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 24,165
Default Letting off steam

In article , PeterN
wrote:


They give me a number to call, which does not compare with any
legitimate Apple number. I have reported this phony number to Apple.


there's nothing apple or anyone else can realistically do. the calls
are almost certainly coming from outside the usa, and it's only going
to get worse.


So you are saying that the number they ask me to call cannot be traced?


realistically, no.

scammers use voip, so the best you could do with a traditional trace is
find where it connects to pots network.

you might be able to obtain an ip address (which could be spoofed),
which geolocates to somewhere on the other side of the planet.

what are you going to do now?

According to one of my friends, who was an engineer with the original
AT&T, and another friend who is retired from a TLOF agency, just about
any number can be traced, though some with more difficulty than other's.


he's living in the past.

today, with voip, it's a whole different game.

I also heard some horror stories about some who were naive enough to
either press the requested button, or call the number they ask you to call.


there are always horror stories. so what?
  #8  
Old April 17th 18, 03:49 AM posted to rec.photo.digital
PeterN[_7_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 1,161
Default Letting off steam

On 4/16/2018 3:10 PM, nospam wrote:
In article , PeterN
wrote:


They give me a number to call, which does not compare with any
legitimate Apple number. I have reported this phony number to Apple.

there's nothing apple or anyone else can realistically do. the calls
are almost certainly coming from outside the usa, and it's only going
to get worse.


So you are saying that the number they ask me to call cannot be traced?


realistically, no.

scammers use voip, so the best you could do with a traditional trace is
find where it connects to pots network.

you might be able to obtain an ip address (which could be spoofed),
which geolocates to somewhere on the other side of the planet.

what are you going to do now?

According to one of my friends, who was an engineer with the original
AT&T, and another friend who is retired from a TLOF agency, just about
any number can be traced, though some with more difficulty than other's.


he's living in the past.

today, with voip, it's a whole different game.

For several reasons I trust what these guys say, over what you say.
Don't bother to reply, unless you show me the type of solid evidence
that they have shown me.


I also heard some horror stories about some who were naive enough to
either press the requested button, or call the number they ask you to call.


there are always horror stories. so what?

You missed my point completely.


--
PeterN
  #9  
Old April 17th 18, 04:10 AM posted to rec.photo.digital
nospam
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 24,165
Default Letting off steam

In article , PeterN
wrote:


They give me a number to call, which does not compare with any
legitimate Apple number. I have reported this phony number to Apple.

there's nothing apple or anyone else can realistically do. the calls
are almost certainly coming from outside the usa, and it's only going
to get worse.

So you are saying that the number they ask me to call cannot be traced?


realistically, no.

scammers use voip, so the best you could do with a traditional trace is
find where it connects to pots network.

you might be able to obtain an ip address (which could be spoofed),
which geolocates to somewhere on the other side of the planet.

what are you going to do now?

According to one of my friends, who was an engineer with the original
AT&T, and another friend who is retired from a TLOF agency, just about
any number can be traced, though some with more difficulty than other's.


he's living in the past.

today, with voip, it's a whole different game.

For several reasons I trust what these guys say, over what you say.


then you're foolish.

Don't bother to reply, unless you show me the type of solid evidence
that they have shown me.


what did they show you? tracing voip is *very* different than tracing
pots, as explained above.
  #10  
Old April 16th 18, 01:29 AM posted to rec.photo.digital
(PeteCresswell)
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 267
Default Letting off steam

Per PeterN:
For the forth time this week I got a phone call from a telephone that
spoofs the telephone number of an Apple store.


My cell phone gets fairly-frequent robocalls from numbers on the same
exchange.

With me it's to the point where, if you are not in my phonebook, I do not
answer.

On the land line, since starting NoMoRobo, robo and solicitor calls have
dropped from 6-10 per day to *maybe* one per month.
--
Pete Cresswell
 




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