A genuine phone scam

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Below are details of a scam currently going the rounds. The police have
requested that as many people are alerted as possible. Unfortunately it is
a genuine scam.
Police Report.
The reason this is working so well is it plays on your good will!
Picture the scene:-
You are sitting at home and there is a knock at the door. On answering it
you are confronted by a respectable looking woman in a suit, who is
slightly distressed. She explains that her car has broken down further
down the road and she needs to contact her husband to come to her aid. Is
it at all possible to use your phone to call him?
You allow her to use the phone, but being the suspicious type you stand
with her as she makes the call. She dials the number, and asks to be put
through to Mr Smith / Brown / Stevens (Whatever). She holds the line for
about thirty seconds. She continues, "In that case can you ask him to
leave the meeting for a minute I need to speak to him quite urgently." She
apologies again and explains they are getting him out of a meeting.
A couple of minutes goes by and she starts to speak to her husband. She
explains the situation to him, tells him what has happened to the car, is
annoyed because she now can't get to her meeting, and asks what she should
do now. She listens for a few seconds and then says, "Well as soon as the
meeting finishes can you come to Cardiff Road / Leicester Road / Surrey
Street (Whatever), where the car has broken down. Another few seconds go
by, "OK, I'll see you in about twenty minutes then."
She put the phone down, and thanks you ever so much for your kind
assistance, even offering you a pound for your trouble, but of course you
decline, it's no trouble.
She leaves and everything is fine.
Or is it?
The day or week before knocking on your door she set up her own premium
rate line with a telephone company at the cost of about £150, and she has
dictated that calls to that number should be charged at £50 per minute.
She has dialled that number. The conversation she has had with her
"husband" is entirely fictitious, there is a pre-recorded voice message on
the other end to give you the impression she is talking to someone. She
has been on the phone for about five minutes, that call just cost you
£250, the majority of which goes into her pocket, and the first you know
about it is when you get your bill a month later.
To rub a bit of salt into the wound,she hasn't even committed a criminal
offence. You've given her permission to use your phone. 5 occasions in
Luton where this has been reported in the last couple of weeks .
Would anyone reading this please pass it on to friends and colleagues etc.
otherwise it could cost someone a lot of money.
PC Paul Toseland
Corby Business Anti-Crime Network Administrator
 
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Don't worry, this one isn't real! £1.50 a minute is the limit, and the rate is dictated by the provider NOT the service owner.

It is good to hear such warnings, but I urge anyone to quickly check on whether or not it is real (99.9% of the time it isn't). Otherwise you could be worrying for nothing, and some poor stranded lady will remain stranded!
 
AdamW said:
Don't worry, this one isn't real!
I can't believe it ! I'm at work now and this was sent to us via e-mail by our company manager. Thanks for the link, I shall forward it to them !
 
I agree, as far as I know £1.50 p/m is the limit.

I used to work for NTL customer services and the worst I know of is the following:

You're browsing the net and come across a site which says "click here to continue": unbeknown to you there is small print at the bottom of the page which says that "continuing will disconnect you from your regular ISP and connect you to our service". At this point it drops your modem and redials on a "09" premium rate number. If you don't realise this is happening you can continue to browse any other site whilst still paying god-knows-what per minute.

Unfortunately this is perfectly legal as it's down to you to read any text on any given site.

Of course, the best way to avoid this is to go broadband and disconnect any standard dial-up modem. Failing that, if you're still on dial-up make sure that you don't have a silent operating modem so that the dialling and "ping ping" noises are audible if it tries to re-connect.
 
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masona said:
AdamW said:
Don't worry, this one isn't real!

I can't believe it ! I'm at work now and this was sent to us via e-mail by our company manager. Thanks for the link, I shall forward it to them !

I found plenty of people in industry who should have known better, sending krap round in emails. Typical was the virus alert from some well know IT company and claiming even Microsoft hadn't heard of it, and encoraging you to pass it on to everybody in your address book.
 
ninebob i fell for that one didnt know a thing about it till i got a phone call from bt telling me that the phone bill nornally £40
had hit £250 over the weekend
bar on the line as soon as :oops:
 
ninebob said:
Inet and come across a site which says "click here to continue": unbeknown to you there is small print at the bottom of the page which says that "continuing will disconnect you from your regular ISP and connect you to our service". At this point it drops your modem and redials on a "09" premium rate number. If you don't realise this is happening you can continue to browse any other site whilst still paying god-knows-what per minute.

This scam is a bad one, but anyone who doesn't have a modem in their PC should be fine.

First instance I heard of someone getting scammed that way was in 1998, a friend told me about his flatmate had been surfing for p0rn, and ended up spending over £50 over the course of a weekend. £50 would easily have covered the price of a ticket to Kings Cross with change to spare for *ahem* anything else you might want to spend money on once you got there. Apparently. :oops:

There have been cases where foreign companies have been fined for operating such services where UK residents have been caught out. Really surprised me as I thought that being abroad would make prosecution impossible.
 
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