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-   -   Strange telephone call (https://www.diybanter.com/uk-diy/319358-strange-telephone-call.html)

MuddyMike February 25th 11 06:55 PM

Strange telephone call
 
A very nice Asian sounding man called Barry from Global UK working on behalf
of Microsoft! Keeps telephoning me and STWNFI insisting that our computers
are infected with a virus that is bombarding them the internet with spam. He
tried to convince me that our IP address had been identified by the
International Routing System and this had alerted Microsoft to call in his
services. I led him on a bit this afternoon and he asked me to run EVENT VWR
on my PC.
Sadly at that point the other phone rang and it was a call I was waiting for
so had to take it.
Anyone know where this was leading? I know its a crock of ****, for one
thing we don't have a static IP address that could be traced back to my
phone number.

Mike



tony sayer February 25th 11 06:59 PM

Strange telephone call
 
In article , MuddyMike
scribeth thus
A very nice Asian sounding man called Barry from Global UK working on behalf
of Microsoft! Keeps telephoning me and STWNFI insisting that our computers
are infected with a virus that is bombarding them the internet with spam. He
tried to convince me that our IP address had been identified by the
International Routing System and this had alerted Microsoft to call in his
services. I led him on a bit this afternoon and he asked me to run EVENT VWR
on my PC.
Sadly at that point the other phone rang and it was a call I was waiting for
so had to take it.
Anyone know where this was leading? I know its a crock of ****, for one
thing we don't have a static IP address that could be traced back to my
phone number.

Mike





Jim K[_3_] February 25th 11 07:00 PM

Strange telephone call
 
On Feb 25, 6:55 pm, "MuddyMike" wrote:
A very nice Asian sounding man called Barry from Global UK working on behalf
of Microsoft! Keeps telephoning me and STWNFI insisting that our computers
are infected with a virus that is bombarding them the internet with spam. He
tried to convince me that our IP address had been identified by the
International Routing System and this had alerted Microsoft to call in his
services. I led him on a bit this afternoon and he asked me to run EVENT VWR
on my PC.
Sadly at that point the other phone rang and it was a call I was waiting for
so had to take it.
Anyone know where this was leading? I know its a crock of ****, for one
thing we don't have a static IP address that could be traced back to my
phone number.

Mike


time you did some googling methinks

http://www.digitaltoast.co.uk/suppor...temrecure-scam

Jim K

Andrew Gabriel February 25th 11 07:29 PM

Strange telephone call
 
In article ,
"MuddyMike" writes:
A very nice Asian sounding man called Barry from Global UK working on behalf
of Microsoft! Keeps telephoning me and STWNFI insisting that our computers
are infected with a virus that is bombarding them the internet with spam. He
tried to convince me that our IP address had been identified by the
International Routing System and this had alerted Microsoft to call in his
services. I led him on a bit this afternoon and he asked me to run EVENT VWR
on my PC.


Oh, I'd love to get one of those.

All I seem to get at the moment are
"Sir, we've been told that you or a member of your family were
involved in an accident recently"...
which isn't true, so I just tell them they've been ripped off by
the person who sold them the data (and this sector is now a large
business, so it's not surprising people started selling fake data).

--
Andrew Gabriel
[email address is not usable -- followup in the newsgroup]

ARWadsworth February 25th 11 07:40 PM

Strange telephone call
 
Andrew Gabriel wrote:
In article ,
"MuddyMike" writes:
A very nice Asian sounding man called Barry from Global UK working
on behalf of Microsoft! Keeps telephoning me and STWNFI insisting
that our computers are infected with a virus that is bombarding them
the internet with spam. He tried to convince me that our IP address
had been identified by the International Routing System and this had
alerted Microsoft to call in his services. I led him on a bit this
afternoon and he asked me to run EVENT VWR on my PC.


Oh, I'd love to get one of those.

All I seem to get at the moment are
"Sir, we've been told that you or a member of your family were
involved in an accident recently"...
which isn't true, so I just tell them they've been ripped off by
the person who sold them the data (and this sector is now a large
business, so it's not surprising people started selling fake data).


How odd. I was a witness to a car accident last week. I have had 3
calls/texts already about my claim! I managed to keep one woman on the phone
for 15 minutes before she realised I was making my injuries up and was not
involved in an accident.

--
Adam



fred February 25th 11 08:15 PM

Strange telephone call
 
In article , ARWadsworth
writes

How odd. I was a witness to a car accident last week. I have had 3
calls/texts already about my claim! I managed to keep one woman on the phone
for 15 minutes before she realised I was making my injuries up and was not
involved in an accident.

Next time break off when you get to 10mins to tell them how sorry you
are that their career in prostitution didn't work out as you're sure
they wouldn't have to work in such a low down, ****ty job if it had
worked out for them. Were they too stick faced to make a go of it?
--
fred
FIVE TV's superbright logo - not the DOG's, it's ********

Skipweasel[_4_] February 25th 11 08:44 PM

Strange telephone call
 
In article ,
says...
How odd. I was a witness to a car accident last week. I have had 3
calls/texts already about my claim! I managed to keep one woman on the phone
for 15 minutes before she realised I was making my injuries up and was not
involved in an accident.


Did you at any point give permission for your details to be passed
around?

If not, I suspect this selling of data (whether you're a witness or
directly involved) is illegal. You have no business relationship with
them and the Data Protection Registrar really ought to look into this.

IANAL - but the uk.legal nest of vipers might be worth poking.

--
Skipweasel - never knowingly understood.

Graham.[_3_] February 25th 11 08:48 PM

Strange telephone call
 

"ARWadsworth" wrote in message ...
Andrew Gabriel wrote:
In article ,
"MuddyMike" writes:
A very nice Asian sounding man called Barry from Global UK working
on behalf of Microsoft! Keeps telephoning me and STWNFI insisting
that our computers are infected with a virus that is bombarding them
the internet with spam. He tried to convince me that our IP address
had been identified by the International Routing System and this had
alerted Microsoft to call in his services. I led him on a bit this
afternoon and he asked me to run EVENT VWR on my PC.


Oh, I'd love to get one of those.

All I seem to get at the moment are
"Sir, we've been told that you or a member of your family were
involved in an accident recently"...
which isn't true, so I just tell them they've been ripped off by
the person who sold them the data (and this sector is now a large
business, so it's not surprising people started selling fake data).


How odd. I was a witness to a car accident last week. I have had 3 calls/texts already about my claim! I managed to keep one woman
on the phone for 15 minutes before she realised I was making my injuries up and was not involved in an accident.

--
Adam


I'm surprised they gave up so easily if they were genuine claims management people.
She would be about as bothered about how genuine your injury was as a defence
barrister is about the actual guilt or innocence of his client.

Witnessing an accident can be the cause of much mental anguish and trauma ;-) ;-) ;-)


--
Graham.

%Profound_observation%



ARWadsworth February 25th 11 08:53 PM

Strange telephone call
 
fred wrote:
In article , ARWadsworth
writes

How odd. I was a witness to a car accident last week. I have had 3
calls/texts already about my claim! I managed to keep one woman on
the phone for 15 minutes before she realised I was making my
injuries up and was not involved in an accident.

Next time break off when you get to 10mins to tell them how sorry you
are that their career in prostitution didn't work out as you're sure
they wouldn't have to work in such a low down, ****ty job if it had
worked out for them. Were they too stick faced to make a go of it?


Considering it took her 10 minutes to realise that "I poked myself in my eye
with my bellend" in the accident was a wind up, I assume that she was
stupid. Her timing was perfect, I was in the wholesalers and put the call on
hands free to amuse the staff when I realised it was a ripoff/ambulance
chaser type of call.

Adam



Robin February 25th 11 09:00 PM

Strange telephone call
 
If not, I suspect this selling of data (whether you're a witness or
directly involved) is illegal. You have no business relationship with
them and the Data Protection Registrar really ought to look into this.

That does not help much if (as is often the case) the call is coming
from India from an Indian firm working on the commission they get for
providing "leads". All such firms overseas know as well as your local
yobs that "you can't touch me".

The government tells us the £250m or so a year the UK provides in the
form of overseas aid to India improves our national security. But sadly
it does not seem to buy us any security from (in the past week alone
here) telephone offering release from my debts, savings on gas and
electricity, cheaper insurance and entry in a free draw if I'll just
answer a few questions about my savings.

--
Robin
PM may be sent to rbw0{at}hotmail{dot}com



Graham.[_3_] February 25th 11 09:02 PM

Strange telephone call
 

"Skipweasel" wrote in message ...
In article ,
says...
How odd. I was a witness to a car accident last week. I have had 3
calls/texts already about my claim! I managed to keep one woman on the phone
for 15 minutes before she realised I was making my injuries up and was not
involved in an accident.


Did you at any point give permission for your details to be passed
around?

If not, I suspect this selling of data (whether you're a witness or
directly involved) is illegal. You have no business relationship with
them and the Data Protection Registrar really ought to look into this.

IANAL - but the uk.legal nest of vipers might be worth poking.

--
Skipweasel - never knowingly understood.


I didn't feel that way when several firms contacted me to try and get me to make
a personal injury claim. After all, I had nothing to lose. As it happens, I didn't want to peruse
a claim.

--
Graham.

%Profound_observation%



ARWadsworth February 25th 11 09:02 PM

Strange telephone call
 
Graham. wrote:

I'm surprised they gave up so easily if they were genuine claims
management people. She would be about as bothered about how genuine your
injury was as a
defence barrister is about the actual guilt or innocence of his client.


See my reply to fred. I did take the **** out of her.

Witnessing an accident can be the cause of much mental anguish and
trauma ;-) ;-) ;-)


Not witnessing one is bad enough. I remember the MiL getting run over by a
snowplough and I missed it.

--
Adam



Andrew Gabriel February 25th 11 09:19 PM

Strange telephone call
 
In article ,
Skipweasel writes:
In article ,
says...
How odd. I was a witness to a car accident last week. I have had 3
calls/texts already about my claim! I managed to keep one woman on the phone
for 15 minutes before she realised I was making my injuries up and was not
involved in an accident.


Did you at any point give permission for your details to be passed
around?


The information is sold by your insurance company in the first
instance, and yes, you did given them permission to do so - it's
a condition of your insurance, and it's a big earner for them.
Ironically, it ends up costing them much more in claims, but as
they pass that on to you, it's not their problem. It's grown
enormously in the last year, and is indirectly responsible for
all of the 30% average increase in motor insurance premiums over
the last year (a period during which accidents have dropped),
due to much higher payouts due to rapid increase in ambulance
chasers.

Many insurers have said this should be made illegal, because
they can't stop doing it unless everyone stops doing it.

--
Andrew Gabriel
[email address is not usable -- followup in the newsgroup]

The Natural Philosopher[_2_] February 25th 11 09:34 PM

Strange telephone call
 
ARWadsworth wrote:
Andrew Gabriel wrote:
In article ,
"MuddyMike" writes:
A very nice Asian sounding man called Barry from Global UK working
on behalf of Microsoft! Keeps telephoning me and STWNFI insisting
that our computers are infected with a virus that is bombarding them
the internet with spam. He tried to convince me that our IP address
had been identified by the International Routing System and this had
alerted Microsoft to call in his services. I led him on a bit this
afternoon and he asked me to run EVENT VWR on my PC.

Oh, I'd love to get one of those.

All I seem to get at the moment are
"Sir, we've been told that you or a member of your family were
involved in an accident recently"...
which isn't true, so I just tell them they've been ripped off by
the person who sold them the data (and this sector is now a large
business, so it's not surprising people started selling fake data).


How odd. I was a witness to a car accident last week. I have had 3
calls/texts already about my claim! I managed to keep one woman on the phone
for 15 minutes before she realised I was making my injuries up and was not
involved in an accident.

Ah, was that the accident where your head became detached from your body?

As my wife said when asked if she could remember exactly when the
accident occurred 'No, I've lost my head and cant remember anything'


Bob Eager February 25th 11 09:44 PM

Strange telephone call
 
On Fri, 25 Feb 2011 21:19:18 +0000, Andrew Gabriel wrote:

In article ,
Skipweasel writes:
In article ,
says...
How odd. I was a witness to a car accident last week. I have had 3
calls/texts already about my claim! I managed to keep one woman on the
phone for 15 minutes before she realised I was making my injuries up
and was not involved in an accident.


Did you at any point give permission for your details to be passed
around?


The information is sold by your insurance company in the first instance,
and yes, you did given them permission to do so - it's a condition of
your insurance, and it's a big earner for them.


True, but he wasn't the insured, was he?



--
Use the BIG mirror service in the UK:
http://www.mirrorservice.org

*lightning protection* - a w_tom conductor

Peter Scott February 25th 11 09:59 PM

Strange telephone call
 
On 25/02/2011 18:55, MuddyMike wrote:
A very nice Asian sounding man called Barry from Global UK working on behalf
of Microsoft! Keeps telephoning me and STWNFI insisting that our computers
are infected with a virus that is bombarding them the internet with spam. He
tried to convince me that our IP address had been identified by the
International Routing System and this had alerted Microsoft to call in his
services. I led him on a bit this afternoon and he asked me to run EVENT VWR
on my PC.
Sadly at that point the other phone rang and it was a call I was waiting for
so had to take it.
Anyone know where this was leading? I know its a crock of ****, for one
thing we don't have a static IP address that could be traced back to my
phone number.

Mike



Listen to past episodes of The Bob Servant Emails on BBC radio 4. Object
lessons in how wind up and waste the time of spammers. If we all did it
they'd get a real job (or go into politics I guess)

Peter Scott

The Natural Philosopher[_2_] February 25th 11 10:11 PM

Strange telephone call
 
John Rumm wrote:
On 25/02/2011 18:55, MuddyMike wrote:
A very nice Asian sounding man called Barry from Global UK working on
behalf
of Microsoft! Keeps telephoning me and STWNFI insisting that our
computers
are infected with a virus that is bombarding them the internet with
spam. He
tried to convince me that our IP address had been identified by the
International Routing System and this had alerted Microsoft to call in
his
services. I led him on a bit this afternoon and he asked me to run
EVENT VWR
on my PC.
Sadly at that point the other phone rang and it was a call I was
waiting for
so had to take it.
Anyone know where this was leading? I know its a crock of ****, for one
thing we don't have a static IP address that could be traced back to my
phone number.


Common story - usually leads you to letting them have remote control to
"fix" your computer and then them billing your CC either for the remote
fixing of various "problems" or flogging you some worthless (or worse)
software to do the same.

You left out 'and adding you to their botnets
and having stripped all your passwords as well'

geoff February 25th 11 10:15 PM

Strange telephone call
 
In message , ARWadsworth
writes
Graham. wrote:

I'm surprised they gave up so easily if they were genuine claims
management people. She would be about as bothered about how genuine your
injury was as a
defence barrister is about the actual guilt or innocence of his client.


See my reply to fred. I did take the **** out of her.

Witnessing an accident can be the cause of much mental anguish and
trauma ;-) ;-) ;-)


Not witnessing one is bad enough. I remember the MiL getting run over by a
snowplough and I missed it.

Did it stop her talking for more than 10 seconds?

--
geoff

fred February 25th 11 10:30 PM

Strange telephone call
 
In article , ARWadsworth
writes
fred wrote:
In article , ARWadsworth
writes

How odd. I was a witness to a car accident last week. I have had 3
calls/texts already about my claim! I managed to keep one woman on
the phone for 15 minutes before she realised I was making my
injuries up and was not involved in an accident.

Next time break off when you get to 10mins to tell them how sorry you
are that their career in prostitution didn't work out as you're sure
they wouldn't have to work in such a low down, ****ty job if it had
worked out for them. Were they too stick faced to make a go of it?


Considering it took her 10 minutes to realise that "I poked myself in my eye
with my bellend" in the accident was a wind up, I assume that she was
stupid. Her timing was perfect, I was in the wholesalers and put the call on
hands free to amuse the staff when I realised it was a ripoff/ambulance
chaser type of call.

LOL, I should have known I could rely on you to make the best possible
mileage from it.
--
fred
FIVE TV's superbright logo - not the DOG's, it's ********

SS[_2_] February 25th 11 10:49 PM

Strange telephone call
 

"The Natural Philosopher" wrote in message
...
John Rumm wrote:
On 25/02/2011 18:55, MuddyMike wrote:
A very nice Asian sounding man called Barry from Global UK working on
behalf
of Microsoft! Keeps telephoning me and STWNFI insisting that our
computers
are infected with a virus that is bombarding them the internet with
spam. He
tried to convince me that our IP address had been identified by the
International Routing System and this had alerted Microsoft to call in
his
services. I led him on a bit this afternoon and he asked me to run EVENT
VWR
on my PC.
Sadly at that point the other phone rang and it was a call I was waiting
for
so had to take it.
Anyone know where this was leading? I know its a crock of ****, for one
thing we don't have a static IP address that could be traced back to my
phone number.


Common story - usually leads you to letting them have remote control to
"fix" your computer and then them billing your CC either for the remote
fixing of various "problems" or flogging you some worthless (or worse)
software to do the same.

You left out 'and adding you to their botnets
and having stripped all your passwords as well'

I advise them that my company (dont have one) records all calls for training
purposes!
the phone usually goes down sharpish.



Cash February 25th 11 11:41 PM

Strange telephone call
 
MuddyMike wrote:
A very nice Asian sounding man called Barry from Global UK working on
behalf of Microsoft! Keeps telephoning me and STWNFI insisting that
our computers are infected with a virus that is bombarding them the
internet with spam. He tried to convince me that our IP address had
been identified by the International Routing System and this had
alerted Microsoft to call in his services. I led him on a bit this
afternoon and he asked me to run EVENT VWR on my PC.
Sadly at that point the other phone rang and it was a call I was
waiting for so had to take it.
Anyone know where this was leading? I know its a crock of ****, for
one thing we don't have a static IP address that could be traced back
to my phone number.

Mike


Mike.

I had one tell me to look in the Prefetch folder and I would find hundreds
of 'infected' files there that would need 'cleaning out' - he put the phone
done when I told him that I had disabled [1] this feature in the registry
of Windows XP SP3 and that he was trying on a f****g [2] scam to get me to
let him have remote control access [3] to my computer so that he could
download some rather useless program to clear out legitimate files for a
fee - and using my debit card to pay.

[1] Yes I have done this, and no, I don't find that the computer
noticeably takes longer to load files or causes other problems.

[2] I was in a bad mood that evening as this was the third such call in
four days - they haven't rung since.

[3] This feature is also disabled on my computer and two others in the
house.


Cash



The Medway Handyman February 25th 11 11:50 PM

Strange telephone call
 
On 25/02/2011 21:00, Robin wrote:
If not, I suspect this selling of data (whether you're a witness or
directly involved) is illegal. You have no business relationship with
them and the Data Protection Registrar really ought to look into this.

That does not help much if (as is often the case) the call is coming
from India from an Indian firm working on the commission they get for
providing "leads". All such firms overseas know as well as your local
yobs that "you can't touch me".

The government tells us the £250m or so a year the UK provides in the
form of overseas aid to India improves our national security. But sadly
it does not seem to buy us any security from (in the past week alone
here) telephone offering release from my debts, savings on gas and
electricity, cheaper insurance and entry in a free draw if I'll just
answer a few questions about my savings.

I get frequent calls from an Asian man asking where I buy my gas. I
reply by asking him where he buys his - which seems to confuse him. I
say I'll tell him when he tells me.

--
Dave - The Medway Handyman www.medwayhandyman.co.uk

F Murtz[_2_] February 26th 11 01:02 AM

Strange telephone call
 
MuddyMike wrote:
A very nice Asian sounding man called Barry from Global UK working on behalf
of Microsoft! Keeps telephoning me and STWNFI insisting that our computers
are infected with a virus that is bombarding them the internet with spam. He
tried to convince me that our IP address had been identified by the
International Routing System and this had alerted Microsoft to call in his
services. I led him on a bit this afternoon and he asked me to run EVENT VWR
on my PC.
Sadly at that point the other phone rang and it was a call I was waiting for
so had to take it.
Anyone know where this was leading? I know its a crock of ****, for one
thing we don't have a static IP address that could be traced back to my
phone number.

Mike




WTF is STWNFI

Alan[_10_] February 26th 11 11:26 AM

Strange telephone call
 
In message , Peter Scott
wrote

Listen to past episodes of The Bob Servant Emails on BBC radio 4.
Object lessons in how wind up and waste the time of spammers.


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mkdoogjic4I


--
Alan
news2009 {at} admac {dot} myzen {dot} co {dot} uk

nightjar February 26th 11 11:27 AM

Strange telephone call
 
On 25/02/2011 21:59, Peter Scott wrote:
On 25/02/2011 18:55, MuddyMike wrote:
A very nice Asian sounding man called Barry from Global UK working on
behalf
of Microsoft! Keeps telephoning me and STWNFI insisting that our
computers
are infected with a virus that is bombarding them the internet with
spam. He
tried to convince me that our IP address had been identified by the
International Routing System and this had alerted Microsoft to call in
his
services. I led him on a bit this afternoon and he asked me to run
EVENT VWR
on my PC.
Sadly at that point the other phone rang and it was a call I was
waiting for
so had to take it.
Anyone know where this was leading? I know its a crock of ****, for one
thing we don't have a static IP address that could be traced back to my
phone number.

Mike



Listen to past episodes of The Bob Servant Emails on BBC radio 4. Object
lessons in how wind up and waste the time of spammers. If we all did it
they'd get a real job (or go into politics I guess)

Peter Scott


I have better things to do with my time. I simply say I don't take cold
calls and put the phone down.

Colin Bignell

MuddyMike February 26th 11 11:33 AM

Strange telephone call
 

"F Murtz" wrote in message
...
MuddyMike wrote:
A very nice Asian sounding man called Barry from Global UK working on
behalf
of Microsoft! Keeps telephoning me and STWNFI insisting that our
computers
are infected with a virus that is bombarding them the internet with spam.
He
tried to convince me that our IP address had been identified by the



WTF is STWNFI


"She That Whom No Fairer Is"
Thomas Bateson

Mike



Skipweasel[_4_] February 26th 11 12:05 PM

Strange telephone call
 
In article ,
says...
"She That Whom No Fairer Is"
Thomas Bateson


Bottle blonde?

--
Skipweasel - never knowingly understood.

Jim K[_3_] February 26th 11 12:36 PM

Strange telephone call
 
On Feb 26, 12:05 pm, Skipweasel
wrote:
In article ,
says...

"She That Whom No Fairer Is"
Thomas Bateson


Bottle blonde?


easiest way is to check muff and cuffs....

Jim K

John Weston February 26th 11 02:37 PM

Strange telephone call
 
In article , ""Nightjar
\"cpb\"@" "insertmysurnamehere" wrote:

I have better things to do with my time. I simply say I don't take cold
calls and put the phone down.

Colin Bignell


Agreed, but then they often ring back.

I prefer to put on an "official" voice and quickly say "Password please"
and/or "You shouldn't be calling here and a note has been made of your
location. Don't do it again! Goodbye"

Works for me and I'm seldom recalled. Makes me I feel better too :-)
--
John W


Peter Johnson February 26th 11 02:41 PM

Strange telephone call
 
On Fri, 25 Feb 2011 19:29:29 +0000 (UTC),
(Andrew Gabriel) wrote:



Oh, I'd love to get one of those.

I had one a few weeks ago, from a woman. I replied that it was a scam
and put the phone down.

Reentrant[_3_] February 26th 11 03:07 PM

Strange telephone call
 
On 26/02/2011 14:41, Peter Johnson wrote:
On Fri, 25 Feb 2011 19:29:29 +0000 (UTC),
(Andrew Gabriel) wrote:



Oh, I'd love to get one of those.

I had one a few weeks ago, from a woman. I replied that it was a scam
and put the phone down.


We started to get loads of spam calls from India not long after taking
out an ICICI ISA - hardly a coincidence I suspect.
In the end we bought a TrueCall box ("as seen on Dragons' Den") and that
filters out all junk calls.

--
Reentrant

Gill Smith February 26th 11 03:19 PM

Strange telephone call
 
"MuddyMike" wrote in message
...
A very nice Asian sounding man called Barry from Global UK working on
behalf of Microsoft! Keeps telephoning me and STWNFI insisting that our
computers are infected with a virus that is bombarding them the internet
with spam. He tried to convince me that our IP address had been identified
by the International Routing System and this had alerted Microsoft to call
in his services. I led him on a bit this afternoon and he asked me to run
EVENT VWR on my PC.
Sadly at that point the other phone rang and it was a call I was waiting
for so had to take it.
Anyone know where this was leading?


your wallet......

--
http://www.gillsmith999.plus.com/



Peter Scott February 26th 11 03:35 PM

Strange telephone call
 
On 26/02/2011 11:27, Nightjar "cpb"@ insertmysurnamehere wrote:
On 25/02/2011 21:59, Peter Scott wrote:
On 25/02/2011 18:55, MuddyMike wrote:
A very nice Asian sounding man called Barry from Global UK working on
behalf
of Microsoft! Keeps telephoning me and STWNFI insisting that our
computers
are infected with a virus that is bombarding them the internet with
spam. He
tried to convince me that our IP address had been identified by the
International Routing System and this had alerted Microsoft to call in
his
services. I led him on a bit this afternoon and he asked me to run
EVENT VWR
on my PC.
Sadly at that point the other phone rang and it was a call I was
waiting for
so had to take it.
Anyone know where this was leading? I know its a crock of ****, for one
thing we don't have a static IP address that could be traced back to my
phone number.

Mike



Listen to past episodes of The Bob Servant Emails on BBC radio 4. Object
lessons in how wind up and waste the time of spammers. If we all did it
they'd get a real job (or go into politics I guess)

Peter Scott


I have better things to do with my time. I simply say I don't take cold
calls and put the phone down.

Colin Bignell


Oh dear. It's a comedy programme.

Terry Fields February 26th 11 03:38 PM

Strange telephone call
 

MuddyMike wrote:


"F Murtz" wrote in message
...


WTF is STWNFI


"She That Whom No Fairer Is" Thomas Bateson


After a bit of a search I think that might be (for the sake of
accuracy) "...(that) she than whom no fairer is".

Needless to say, my guesses were wide of the mark, so thanks for that.


TF

Dave February 26th 11 03:50 PM

Strange telephone call
 
On 26/02/2011 11:27, Nightjar "cpb"@ insertmysurnamehere wrote:
On 25/02/2011 21:59, Peter Scott wrote:
On 25/02/2011 18:55, MuddyMike wrote:
A very nice Asian sounding man called Barry from Global UK working on
behalf
of Microsoft! Keeps telephoning me and STWNFI insisting that our
computers
are infected with a virus that is bombarding them the internet with
spam. He
tried to convince me that our IP address had been identified by the
International Routing System and this had alerted Microsoft to call in
his
services. I led him on a bit this afternoon and he asked me to run
EVENT VWR
on my PC.
Sadly at that point the other phone rang and it was a call I was
waiting for
so had to take it.
Anyone know where this was leading? I know its a crock of ****, for one
thing we don't have a static IP address that could be traced back to my
phone number.

Mike



Listen to past episodes of The Bob Servant Emails on BBC radio 4. Object
lessons in how wind up and waste the time of spammers. If we all did it
they'd get a real job (or go into politics I guess)

Peter Scott


I have better things to do with my time. I simply say I don't take cold
calls and put the phone down.


Joining the telephone preference service cured it for me, now I get
annoyed by American based calls.

Dave


Skipweasel[_4_] February 26th 11 04:27 PM

Strange telephone call
 
In article ,
says...
Joining the telephone preference service cured it for me, now I get
annoyed by American based calls.


"Congratulations, you have won a luxury crui......ClickBRRRRRRRRR"

--
Skipweasel - never knowingly understood.

Tim[_28_] February 26th 11 05:30 PM

Strange telephone call
 
John Weston wrote:
In article , ""Nightjar
\"cpb\"@" "insertmysurnamehere" wrote:

I have better things to do with my time. I simply say I don't take cold
calls and put the phone down.

Colin Bignell


Agreed, but then they often ring back.

I prefer to put on an "official" voice and quickly say "Password please"
and/or "You shouldn't be calling here and a note has been made of your
location. Don't do it again! Goodbye"

Works for me and I'm seldom recalled. Makes me I feel better too :-)


Simpler still if you don't ever receive legitimate overseas call, a
Truecall unit. Second best invention after the TiVo.

Tim

Skipweasel[_4_] February 26th 11 06:11 PM

Strange telephone call
 
In article 1460915519320434080.866470timdownie2003-
,
says...
Simpler still if you don't ever receive legitimate overseas call, a
Truecall unit. Second best invention after the TiVo.


If it works the way I think it does, then there's a potential problem -
quite a few organisations you might want to hear from withold their
number. The local police usually do, as do most hospitals, for example.

--
Skipweasel - never knowingly understood.

Alan[_10_] February 26th 11 06:14 PM

Strange telephone call
 
In message , Dave
wrote

Joining the telephone preference service cured it for me, now I get
annoyed by American based calls.


It will work for most UK calls but most of the S**T I'm now getting is
international. I just let the answerphone pick up the call and 99% of
the cold callers ring off during the outgoing message.

There area few (Paris Disneyland) who will leave attempt to leave an
automated message, but will start during the outgoing message.

Barleycard credit card fraud department have a sophisticated auto phone
service. On detecting an answerphone it waits until the outgoing message
has finished and then gives a sensible message to contact them.

--
Alan
news2009 {at} admac {dot} myzen {dot} co {dot} uk

PeterC February 26th 11 07:44 PM

Strange telephone call
 
On Sat, 26 Feb 2011 04:36:25 -0800 (PST), Jim K wrote:

On Feb 26, 12:05 pm, Skipweasel
wrote:
In article ,
says...

"She That Whom No Fairer Is"
Thomas Bateson


Bottle blonde?


easiest way is to check muff and cuffs....

Jim K


'tis rumoured that Marylin Munroe was a dyed-in-the-wool blonde.
--
Peter.
The gods will stay away
whilst religions hold sway


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