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15th July 2014, 11:08 AM #1
New telemarketing phone scam (with Australian accent!)
A phone scammer rang me this morning, with a new sort of scam. Picked up the phone and a recorded female Australian accented voice said,
"Hello, this is a call from Telstra for Master Splinter. This is not a telemarketing call. Please press 1."
The voice goes on 'confirm' my identity by asking for my day/month of birth (they already had my year of birth) to state that my account is overdue by $68 and my service will be cut off if I don't pay. It then goes into a 'to pay using a credit card...' speil.
This was all very authentic sounding, except for:
I don't use Telstra.
The calling number ID was blocked.
The speed of delivery was not the usual oh-god-do-I-really-have-to-wait-for-the-next-word rate, it was fast and aggressive.
The 'get my card number' attempt ended after about 45 seconds of very slow response from me.
This one almost had me, except for the whole not using Telstra part.
So beware!
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15th July 2014, 01:00 PM #2
Hi,
Had a call yesterday, your first line describes the voice but it said "This is Virgin Australia, you have been chosen as one of ### people to get $940 off your next trip for more details press 1.
I wasted some breath saying some choice words and hung up.
We have been getting repeated calls claiming to be from Telstra technical department telling us that our service is going to be cut off because our computer is causing many faults on their system, that's as far as I have been able to listen to with out exploding, but yesterday I nearly fell off my chair because when I paused for breath , the female (it is sometimes male) operator apologised most politely for wasting my time.
May your anti virus always protect you and you spell checker never embarrass you.
RegardsHugh
Enough is enough, more than enough is too much.
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15th July 2014, 04:25 PM #3
I had a similar call supposedly from Telstra regarding my Bigpond account being suspended for 6 mths in a very strong Indian accent so bad thats all I could understand. When I asked him to repeat what he said he rambled on so fast I just hung up. However I did contact Tesltra seems they have been inundated with calls checking and reporting the instance.
I guess thats what we get for selling off the National Data Base of numbers to OS companies eh Telstra. These people then sell them back to such as Real Estate etc etc and they skirt round the "Do Not Call" register. One local Real Estate has been warned anymore calls and they'll be looking at harassment charges.
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15th July 2014, 04:31 PM #4
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15th July 2014, 05:00 PM #5
The thing that got me was that it wasn't an indian accent - it was a proper (recorded) Aussie voice, so the usual 'oh, india telescammers, why are you so lame' didn't kick in.
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15th July 2014, 08:10 PM #6
Nobody ever should call you & then ask you to identify yourself.
How do you know that you didn't just give away your identity to a scammer?Cliff.
If you find a post of mine that is missing a pic that you'd like to see, let me know & I'll see if I can find a copy.
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15th July 2014, 11:12 PM #7
Cliff,
This happens quite a lot.
I have had callers from both the Commonwealth Bank and Telstra call me and then ask for confirmation of details. Neither of these are recent either. The CommBank scenario occurred more than 15 years ago I reckon. I am extremely confident both were legitimate calls
I was gob smacked, and asked them why I had to identify myself to them when THEY called me.
I respectfully declined to confirm my details and promised to call them back ... which I did .. and sure enough the call was legit.
BUT .. the scenario described by master splinter is an interesting one.Glenn Visca
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15th July 2014, 11:27 PM #8
I should clarify, neither of them ever asked for credit cards etc. Just name etc. But that still makes me uncomfortable.
Glenn Visca
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16th July 2014, 10:34 PM #921 with 26 years experience
- Join Date
- May 2004
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- Sunshine Coast Queensland
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- 54
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- 0
The thing I find funny is the legit Telstra callers.
My standard response is that I wouldn't use Telstra if there was a gun held to my head, now this is a pretty definate no, yet they still want to argue and try to talk me round.
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16th July 2014, 11:37 PM #10SENIOR MEMBER
- Join Date
- Dec 2007
- Location
- Gold Coast
- Age
- 64
- Posts
- 8
Surely they just confirming you are, well, you ?
Would you rather your financial institution proceeded to discuss your current financial arrangements with your boarder, brother, child or anyone that might answer the household phone. Even more possibilities exist with mobile phones.
Asking who you are, is in fact necessary in many cases. Sure, there are a number of ways it can be done and some may be more palatable than others. In itself, its a harmless piece of information. As you suggest, what else they ask, is really of concern.
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16th July 2014, 11:47 PM #11SENIOR MEMBER
- Join Date
- Dec 2007
- Location
- Gold Coast
- Age
- 64
- Posts
- 8
They won’t be from Telstra. They may not even be a Telstra only dealer. Same goes with Optus, Optus business and even Foxtel. They are certainly not representing these companies but on-selling their services (and you’ll never get them to admit it).
They persist because they have nothing to lose and a possible commission to gain.
I have know idea where they source their info. I assume they use a form of data matching to get names, numbers and carriers. In most cases however, they will fall down when you ask them to tell you what account number they mean. If you even let them get that far.
I never do. Just say no and hang up.
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17th July 2014, 01:35 AM #12New Member
- Join Date
- Dec 2013
- Location
- Perth, Australia
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- 0
This is why we don't answer the phone, and if we do I hand it directly to the 2 year old.
Anyone who knows me calls the mobile or gets me on FB.
Jason
Only one signature on Tapatalk for so many forums is annoying.
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17th July 2014, 09:04 AM #13
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17th July 2014, 09:52 AM #14
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17th July 2014, 09:56 PM #15
Dabbler,
I get that. My point is that these institutions do indeed ask for personal details (read the post from Cliff immediately preceeding mine) ... and quite routinely ... primarily due to privacy legislation.
Would I prefer they discussed my information with someone else ? Of course not. Besides .. its illegal.
However, when the calls arrive from blocked numbers, I don't think its unreasonable to be cautious. They identify me, but I have no way of identifying them.
I don't object to legitimate callers, but I would much prefer to call THEM.Glenn Visca
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