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Thread: phone calls
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16th May 2018, 09:05 PM #1
phone calls
I've been getting quite a few landline calls lately. After answering, there's a period of silence followed by a recorded, but polite, 'Goodbye'. Anybody else have the same?
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16th May 2018, 11:16 PM #2
It's an autodialler checking to see if it is a viable line. Your number is now included in a list that will be sold to telemarketers/scammers
Those were the droids I was looking for.
https://autoblastgates.com.au
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17th May 2018, 03:15 PM #3rrich Guest
If you ever get a call that says "Can you hear me?" NEVER answer "Yes". The yes will be recorded and possibly used later to order something and use your response to complete the deal.
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17th May 2018, 05:11 PM #4Intermediate Member
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Just had this exact thing happen to me as I was reading a thread before this one. Caller ID said it came from a mobile number - which is unusual.
Oh well, another number to add to the "Auto hangup on" (IE do not even send the call through to the handset) list in my VOIP router. That makes about 35 numbers in the list now.
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17th May 2018, 06:43 PM #5Taking a break
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What's a landline?
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17th May 2018, 07:23 PM #6GOLD MEMBER
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17th May 2018, 08:34 PM #7
Nor do you answer real calls or texts
Pat
Work is a necessary evil to be avoided. Mark Twain
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17th May 2018, 09:32 PM #8GOLD MEMBER
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18th May 2018, 12:19 AM #9
And you did!
Pat
Work is a necessary evil to be avoided. Mark Twain
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18th May 2018, 02:13 AM #10
probably had to charge the battery first !!
regards from Alberta, Canada
ian
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18th May 2018, 07:05 AM #11rrich Guest
I got a couple today.
The typical 'Predictive Dial System' with a live person. The second was obviously a computer using an Artificial Intelligence system.
The first (PDS) is a computer that sits in front of a phone bank of telemarketers. The system estimates how quickly someone will be free and available for the next call. If you get there quick enough there will be no one there to talk to you.
The AI system is trying to get donations for some charity. (Probably a scam.) I try to take these systems into illogical paths. Can be fun.
And then there is the robotic calls to have me call somewhere because, the IRS is filing an enforcement action against me , my entire Microsoft is expiring and a few others that don't come to mind at the moment.
And yesterday it went like this.
Hello?
Grandpa is that you? (I don't have any grand children, that I know of.)
Yes! BoBo is that you?
Yes! I need your help. I've been arrested and . . . . (Go get a Western Union money transfer . . . )
Now BoBo, you know that I can't drive since I lost my legs in the Meth Lab explosion. And Grandma had her license taken away after her ninth DUI. This time they took the car and I still have to make car payments and keep the insurance active and valid.
. . . click
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18th May 2018, 09:59 AM #12GOLD MEMBER
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18th May 2018, 10:28 AM #13Senior Member
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I got this samsung phone recently that gives me the "suspected spam" message a lot so I just reject.
Generally I reject all phonecalls from numbers I don't recognise even without the suspected spam message.
When I used to pick it up, for about 5 years straight I used to get a call from different person every time asking for "Glenn Gardner". It got to a point that I rang Telstra and asked them if maybe they had given my number to someone else as well, they said no and there was nothing they could do.
Eventually someone asked for Glenn Gardner, I started asking them where they got the number and who is that person etc etc and over the course of the discussion the guy eventually asked me if I want to buy some insurance
Just don't pick up anything from numbers you don't know. If your job involves doing just that, I feel sorry for you.
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18th May 2018, 10:56 AM #14Try not to be late, but never be early.
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About 30 or 40 years ago I wrote a short article for an Aus' trucking magazine and they misspelt my name in the acknowledgement. Not long after I started getting this spam snail mail with my misspelt name. Obviously the magazine had dished my address etc to their advertisers. The spam died out after awhile of me ignoring them.
More recently Telstra misspelt my name, (Goeffrey) When a foreign accented representative of Telstra would ring me he/she would say "Hello Go Free". I had that much difficulty getting Telstra to spell it correctly I thought it would probably be easier to change my name. The point here is I got no spam calls that misspelt my name apart from Telstra calls.
Cheers,
Go Free.
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18th May 2018, 11:04 AM #15
The problem with not answering unknown numbers is that you WILL miss an important call eventually. Even not answering known numbers is dangerous. When I broke my arm recently I was home alone. I got back inside and called my wife on her mobile and it went to voice mail, it turned out the phone had been switch to airline mode accidentally the night before when using the flashlight option on the drop down menu of the phone. I knew my wife was with her sister so I attempted to ring her. On her mobile our landline number comes up as my wife's name. When the call came in she looked at the phone and Bron was standing next to her so without answering hung up on the call thinking Bron had accidentally hit her fast call with the phone in her handbag. Meanwhile I'm blacking out on the sofa at home.
Second example. A couple of weeks ago I noticed that my VOIP provider had applied overstamping of my mobile number on our homeline. I couldn't fix it myself in the online service options. it was about 4pm so I sent a support email requesting could the overstamping be corrected at their earliest convenience. At about 7pm Bron answers a phone call from an unknown number, from an Indian call centre telling her there is a problem with your phone service........ half way towards telling the caller what to do with his headset the penny dropped that it was a legitimate call and they were fixing our caller id overstamping!
I used to try and mess with scam callers but I just apply the one strike rule now that we are on NBN. Just hangup and add the number to the growing list of do not answers in the voip router.Franklin
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