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OT Nearly got scammed ...
Wife got phone call this moning fom Virgin media and the indian caller
in a busy call centre told her her computer was runing slow and she could speed things up...wife didn't have her laptop on and couldn't find her glasses so she hollered out the window to me in the font garden to come in and speak to the wummin'....so I came in and spoke to her....she asked me if I had my computer on and what was the key to the right of CTRL....I told her FN and she said to push the windows key to the right of that......at that point I twigged it was a scam and hung up....she phoned back imediately and I hung up again....I assumed it was a scam but the scarry thing was The wife would have fell for it....what info were they after after they took over the computer ? |
OT Nearly got scammed ...
On 03/03/2021 11:31, Jethro_uk wrote:
On Wed, 03 Mar 2021 11:26:44 +0000, Jimmy Stewart wrote: Wife got phone call this moning fom Virgin media and the indian caller in a busy call centre told her her computer was runing slow and she could speed things up...wife didn't have her laptop on and couldn't find her glasses so she hollered out the window to me in the font garden to come in and speak to the wummin'....so I came in and spoke to her....she asked me if I had my computer on and what was the key to the right of CTRL....I told her FN and she said to push the windows key to the right of that......at that point I twigged it was a scam and hung up....she phoned back imediately and I hung up again....I assumed it was a scam but the scarry thing was The wife would have fell for it....what info were they after after they took over the computer ? Who knows ? But they probably make a cent or two for every infected computer they can deliver to the bot networks. Crypto mining was in vogue a while back. is pushing the windows key one of the steps to give them control of your computer ? ... |
OT Nearly got scammed ...
On 03/03/2021 11:40, Jimmy Stewart wrote:
On 03/03/2021 11:31, Jethro_uk wrote: On Wed, 03 Mar 2021 11:26:44 +0000, Jimmy Stewart wrote: Wife got phone call this moning fom Virgin media and the indian caller in a busy call centre told her her computer was runing slow and she could speed things up...wife didn't have her laptop on and couldn't find her glasses so she hollered out the window to me in the font garden to come in and speak to the wummin'....so I came in and spoke to her....she asked me if I had my computer on and what was the key to the right of CTRL....I told her FN and she said to push the windows key to the right of that......at that point I twigged it was a scam and hung up....she phoned back imediately and I hung up again....I assumed it was a scam but the scarry thing was The wife would have fell for it....what info were they after after they took over the computer ? Who knows ? But they probably make a cent or two for every infected computer they can deliver to the bot networks. Crypto mining was in vogue a while back. is pushing the windows key one of the steps to give them control of your computer ? ... Thanks goodness you didn't push it. If you had pressed the windows key and R at the same time, they could have taken over your soul. Mind you, most changes would be an improvement. |
OT Nearly got scammed ...
On Wed, 03 Mar 2021 12:00:48 +0000, GB wrote:
On 03/03/2021 11:40, Jimmy Stewart wrote: On 03/03/2021 11:31, Jethro_uk wrote: On Wed, 03 Mar 2021 11:26:44 +0000, Jimmy Stewart wrote: Wife got phone call this moning fom Virgin media and the indian caller in a busy call centre told her her computer was runing slow and she could speed things up...wife didn't have her laptop on and couldn't find her glasses so she hollered out the window to me in the font garden to come in and speak to the wummin'....so I came in and spoke to her....she asked me if I had my computer on and what was the key to the right of CTRL....I told her FN and she said to push the windows key to the right of that......at that point I twigged it was a scam and hung up....she phoned back imediately and I hung up again....I assumed it was a scam but the scarry thing was The wife would have fell for it....what info were they after after they took over the computer ? Who knows ? But they probably make a cent or two for every infected computer they can deliver to the bot networks. Crypto mining was in vogue a while back. is pushing the windows key one of the steps to give them control of your computer ? ... Thanks goodness you didn't push it. If you had pressed the windows key and R at the same time, they could have taken over your soul. Mind you, most changes would be an improvement. oh, that is so unfair the way you treat jimbo |
OT Nearly got scammed ...
On 03/03/2021 12:00, GB wrote:
On 03/03/2021 11:40, Jimmy Stewart wrote: On 03/03/2021 11:31, Jethro_uk wrote: On Wed, 03 Mar 2021 11:26:44 +0000, Jimmy Stewart wrote: Wife got phone call this moning fom Virgin media and the indian caller in a busy call centre told her her computer was runing slow and she could speed things up...wife didn't have her laptop on and couldn't find her glasses so she hollered out the window to me in the font garden to come in and speak to the wummin'....so I came in and spoke to her....she asked me if I had my computer on and what was the key to the right of CTRL....I told her FN and she said to push the windows key to the right of that......at that point I twigged it was a scam and hung up....she phoned back imediately and I hung up again....I assumed it was a scam but the scarry thing was The wife would have fell for it....what info were they after after they took over the computer ? Who knows ? But they probably make a cent or two for every infected computer they can deliver to the bot networks. Crypto mining was in vogue a while back. is pushing the windows key one of the steps to give them control of your computer ? ... Thanks goodness you didn't push it. If you had pressed the windows key and R at the same time, they could have taken over your soul. Mind you, most changes would be an improvement. come to think of it she did say push both.... http://www.zeigen.com/shortcuts/2007/08/03/run/ |
OT Nearly got scammed ...
On 03/03/2021 12:40, Jimmy Stewart ... wrote:
On 03/03/2021 12:00, GB wrote: On 03/03/2021 11:40, Jimmy Stewart wrote: On 03/03/2021 11:31, Jethro_uk wrote: On Wed, 03 Mar 2021 11:26:44 +0000, Jimmy Stewart wrote: Wife got phone call this moning fom Virgin media and the indian caller in a busy call centre told her her computer was runing slow and she could speed things up...wife didn't have her laptop on and couldn't find her glasses so she hollered out the window to me in the font garden to come in and speak to the wummin'....so I came in and spoke to her....she asked me if I had my computer on and what was the key to the right of CTRL....I told her FN and she said to push the windows key to the right of that......at that point I twigged it was a scam and hung up....she phoned back imediately and I hung up again....I assumed it was a scam but the scarry thing was The wife would have fell for it....what info were they after after they took over the computer ? Who knows ? But they probably make a cent or two for every infected computer they can deliver to the bot networks. Crypto mining was in vogue a while back. is pushing the windows key one of the steps to give them control of your computer ? ... Thanks goodness you didn't push it. If you had pressed the windows key and R at the same time, they could have taken over your soul. Mind you, most changes would be an improvement. come to think of it she did say push both.... http://www.zeigen.com/shortcuts/2007/08/03/run/ https://www.infoworld.com/article/30...-scammers.html |
OT Nearly got scammed ...
On 03/03/2021 12:00, GB wrote:
On 03/03/2021 11:40, Jimmy Stewart wrote: On 03/03/2021 11:31, Jethro_uk wrote: On Wed, 03 Mar 2021 11:26:44 +0000, Jimmy Stewart wrote: Wife got phone call this moning fom Virgin media and the indian caller in a busy call centre told her her computer was runing slow and she could speed things up...wife didn't have her laptop on and couldn't find her glasses so she hollered out the window to me in the font garden to come in and speak to the wummin'....so I came in and spoke to her....she asked me if I had my computer on and what was the key to the right of CTRL....I told her FN and she said to push the windows key to the right of that......at that point I twigged it was a scam and hung up....she phoned back imediately and I hung up again....I assumed it was a scam but the scarry thing was The wife would have fell for it....what info were they after after they took over the computer ? Who knows ? But they probably make a cent or two for every infected computer they can deliver to the bot networks. Crypto mining was in vogue a while back. is pushing the windows key one of the steps to give them control of your computer ? ... Thanks goodness you didn't push it. If you had pressed the windows key and R at the same time, they could have taken over your soul. Mind you, most changes would be an improvement. indeed...I am a bad man .... |
OT Nearly got scammed ...
On 03/03/2021 12:40, jon wrote:
On Wed, 03 Mar 2021 12:00:48 +0000, GB wrote: On 03/03/2021 11:40, Jimmy Stewart wrote: On 03/03/2021 11:31, Jethro_uk wrote: On Wed, 03 Mar 2021 11:26:44 +0000, Jimmy Stewart wrote: Wife got phone call this moning fom Virgin media and the indian caller in a busy call centre told her her computer was runing slow and she could speed things up...wife didn't have her laptop on and couldn't find her glasses so she hollered out the window to me in the font garden to come in and speak to the wummin'....so I came in and spoke to her....she asked me if I had my computer on and what was the key to the right of CTRL....I told her FN and she said to push the windows key to the right of that......at that point I twigged it was a scam and hung up....she phoned back imediately and I hung up again....I assumed it was a scam but the scarry thing was The wife would have fell for it....what info were they after after they took over the computer ? Who knows ? But they probably make a cent or two for every infected computer they can deliver to the bot networks. Crypto mining was in vogue a while back. is pushing the windows key one of the steps to give them control of your computer ? ... Thanks goodness you didn't push it. If you had pressed the windows key and R at the same time, they could have taken over your soul. Mind you, most changes would be an improvement. oh, that is so unfair the way you treat jimbo totly |
OT Nearly got scammed ...
In article ,
Jimmy Stewart wrote: Wife got phone call this moning fom Virgin media and the indian caller in a busy call centre told her her computer was runing slow and she could speed things up...wife didn't have her laptop on and couldn't find her glasses so she hollered out the window to me in the font garden to come in and speak to the wummin'....so I came in and spoke to her....she asked me if I had my computer on and what was the key to the right of CTRL....I told her FN and she said to push the windows key to the right of that......at that point I twigged it was a scam and hung up....she phoned back imediately and I hung up again....I assumed it was a scam but the scarry thing was The wife would have fell for it....what info were they after after they took over the computer ? I had one of these calls a few months ago. When I said the key had a cogwheel on it, there was a long pause. Then "Is it a Windows computer?", to which I replied "No" and they hung up. -- from KT24 in Surrey, England "I'd rather die of exhaustion than die of boredom" Thomas Carlyle |
OT Nearly got scammed ...
On Wed, 3 Mar 2021 12:00:48 +0000, GB
wrote: snip is pushing the windows key one of the steps to give them control of your computer ? ... Thanks goodness you didn't push it. If you had pressed the windows key and R at the same time, they could have taken over your soul. Mind you, most changes would be an improvement. ;-) I really don't understand how / why most 'fully marbled' people could / would fall for any such things, unless they lived under a rock? Unfortunately the BIL has lived under a (technical) rock and not long after going online, fell for a scam and was tricked into moving a large chunk of his savings into a 'safe account' (theirs of course). Luckily he got it all back but ... People read the papers, watch the news, follow social media where warnings about this sort of scam are abundant but some still seem to fall for it? A telephone call from 'Windows Support' or 'BT Openreach' (from a noisy call centre in India) telling me my BT broadband will be disconnected (when I'm on cable) or that my Windows PC is compromised (when I'm on Linux in that instance) is normally all it takes to start the bells ringing (and not the tinnitus this time) and then I can decide how far I want to play them and waste their time. I did suggest to one that they 'sounded reasonably technical, why don't you get a genuine job in IT support?' and their reply was that there were none available. Cheers, T i m |
OT Nearly got scammed ...
Jimmy Stewart wrote:
On 03/03/2021 11:31, Jethro_uk wrote: On Wed, 03 Mar 2021 11:26:44 +0000, Jimmy Stewart wrote: Wife got phone call this moning fom Virgin media and the indian caller in a busy call centre told her her computer was runing slow and she could speed things up...wife didn't have her laptop on and couldn't find her glasses so she hollered out the window to me in the font garden to come in and speak to the wummin'....so I came in and spoke to her....she asked me if I had my computer on and what was the key to the right of CTRL....I told her FN and she said to push the windows key to the right of that......at that point I twigged it was a scam and hung up....she phoned back imediately and I hung up again....I assumed it was a scam but the scarry thing was The wife would have fell for it....what info were they after after they took over the computer ? Who knows ? But they probably make a cent or two for every infected computer they can deliver to the bot networks. Crypto mining was in vogue a while back. is pushing the windows key one of the steps to give them control of your computer ? ... This is the "8000 errors scam". AKA "Tech Support scam". "To access Event Viewer select the keyboard shortcut Win+R, type eventvwr.msc and press the ENTER key." The idea is, the victim sees the ton of error messages and other useless tripe in the Event Viewer (which is harmless stuff) and then the caller "asks for £200 to fix it". Then they remote in and mess around. All they want, is your £200. There never seems to be any attempt to do more than that. You give them your credit card number, and some tech support firm appears on your next credit card billing statement, with a charge for £200. One of the larger scam outfits, got raided by the police and shut down. But there is always another punter to start a new one. And don't taunt them. You might think it's clever to swear at them or be rude, but you'll be sorry if you do. They won't leave you alone if you do that. They can be quite vile on the phone. If they did get into the computer, then you should clean C: (restore from a backup). Now, for £200 , I can remote in and do that for you. I'm at 1-800-Ruin4PC. Paul |
OT Nearly got scammed ...
On 03/03/2021 13:04, T i m wrote:
On Wed, 3 Mar 2021 12:00:48 +0000, GB wrote: snip is pushing the windows key one of the steps to give them control of your computer ? ... Thanks goodness you didn't push it. If you had pressed the windows key and R at the same time, they could have taken over your soul. Mind you, most changes would be an improvement. ;-) I really don't understand how / why most 'fully marbled' people could / would fall for any such things, unless they lived under a rock? Unfortunately the BIL has lived under a (technical) rock and not long after going online, fell for a scam and was tricked into moving a large chunk of his savings into a 'safe account' (theirs of course). Luckily he got it all back but ... People read the papers, watch the news, follow social media where warnings about this sort of scam are abundant but some still seem to fall for it? A telephone call from 'Windows Support' or 'BT Openreach' (from a noisy call centre in India) telling me my BT broadband will be disconnected (when I'm on cable) or that my Windows PC is compromised (when I'm on Linux in that instance) is normally all it takes to start the bells ringing (and not the tinnitus this time) and then I can decide how far I want to play them and waste their time. I did suggest to one that they 'sounded reasonably technical, why don't you get a genuine job in IT support?' and their reply was that there were none available. Cheers, T i m It is the only situation where I get to call them black *******s without fear of prosecution...tee hee |
OT Nearly got scammed ...
On 03/03/2021 13:05, Paul wrote:
Jimmy Stewart wrote: On 03/03/2021 11:31, Jethro_uk wrote: On Wed, 03 Mar 2021 11:26:44 +0000, Jimmy Stewart wrote: Wife got phone call this moning fom Virgin media and the indian caller in a busy call centre told her her computer was runing slow and she could speed things up...wife didn't have her laptop on and couldn't find her glasses so she hollered out the window to me in the font garden to come in and speak to the wummin'....so I came in and spoke to her....she asked me if I had my computer on and what was the key to the right of CTRL....I told her FN and she said to push the windows key to the right of that......at that point I twigged it was a scam and hung up....she phoned back imediately and I hung up again....I assumed it was a scam but the scarry thing was The wife would have fell for it....what info were they after after they took over the computer ? Who knows ? But they probably make a cent or two for every infected computer they can deliver to the bot networks. Crypto mining was in vogue a while back. is pushing the windows key one of the steps to give them control of your computer ? ... This is the "8000 errors scam". AKA "Tech Support scam". ** "To access Event Viewer select the keyboard shortcut *** Win+R, type eventvwr.msc and press the ENTER key." The idea is, the victim sees the ton of error messages and other useless tripe in the Event Viewer (which is harmless stuff) and then the caller "asks for £200 to fix it". Then they remote in and mess around. All they want, is your £200. There never seems to be any attempt to do more than that. You give them your credit card number, and some tech support firm appears on your next credit card billing statement, with a charge for £200. One of the larger scam outfits, got raided by the police and shut down. But there is always another punter to start a new one. And don't taunt them. You might think it's clever to swear at them or be rude, but you'll be sorry if you do. They won't leave you alone if you do that. They can be quite vile on the phone. sound like fun.... If they did get into the computer, then you should clean C: (restore from a backup). Now, for £200 , I can remote in and do that for you. I'm at 1-800-Ruin4PC. ** Paul oh well even the wife would not have been stupid enough to pay them ..... |
OT Nearly got scammed ...
On Wed, 3 Mar 2021 13:07:28 +0000, "Jimmy Stewart ..."
wrote: snip I did suggest to one that they 'sounded reasonably technical, why don't you get a genuine job in IT support?' and their reply was that there were none available. It is the only situation where I get to call them black *******s without fear of prosecution...tee hee Oh, that must be very rewarding for you. And did you know they aren't typically 'black' in India? (Not that you would care just how accurate your racism was obviously). Cheers, T i m |
OT Nearly got scammed ...
On 03/03/2021 13:18, T i m wrote:
On Wed, 3 Mar 2021 13:07:28 +0000, "Jimmy Stewart ..." wrote: snip I did suggest to one that they 'sounded reasonably technical, why don't you get a genuine job in IT support?' and their reply was that there were none available. It is the only situation where I get to call them black *******s without fear of prosecution...tee hee Oh, that must be very rewarding for you. certainly is ..... And did you know they aren't typically 'black' in India? (Not that you would care just how accurate your racism was obviously). Cheers, T i m she was an Indian black ******* |
OT Nearly got scammed ...
In message , Jethro_uk
writes On Wed, 03 Mar 2021 11:26:44 +0000, Jimmy Stewart wrote: Wife got phone call this moning fom Virgin media and the indian caller in a busy call centre told her her computer was runing slow and she could speed things up...wife didn't have her laptop on and couldn't find her glasses so she hollered out the window to me in the font garden to come in and speak to the wummin'....so I came in and spoke to her....she asked me if I had my computer on and what was the key to the right of CTRL....I told her FN and she said to push the windows key to the right of that......at that point I twigged it was a scam and hung up....she phoned back imediately and I hung up again....I assumed it was a scam but the scarry thing was The wife would have fell for it....what info were they after after they took over the computer ? Who knows ? But they probably make a cent or two for every infected computer they can deliver to the bot networks. Crypto mining was in vogue a while back. Does anyone want an iPad (or several)? Almost every day I get an automated call from Amazon telling me that my account has been debited x99 pounds ('x' varies) as payment for an iPad - and if it wasn't me who placed the order to press '1' to arrange for it to be cancelled. As I could do with a new iPad, each time I choose NOT to press 1, and I simply wait for the message to end before ringing off. I therefore have every expectation that I will soon be receiving whole a load of iPads. [I note that, so far, no payments have been deducted from my bank account, and I suspect that the iPad shipments might be being held up because of our present Brexit problems.] However, if they DO eventually arrive, I will only really need one - so would anyone like to make me a sensible offer for the others (either individually, or as a job lot)? -- Ian |
OT Nearly got scammed ...
In message , jon writes
On Wed, 03 Mar 2021 12:00:48 +0000, GB wrote: On 03/03/2021 11:40, Jimmy Stewart wrote: On 03/03/2021 11:31, Jethro_uk wrote: On Wed, 03 Mar 2021 11:26:44 +0000, Jimmy Stewart wrote: Wife got phone call this moning fom Virgin media and the indian caller in a busy call centre told her her computer was runing slow and she could speed things up...wife didn't have her laptop on and couldn't find her glasses so she hollered out the window to me in the font garden to come in and speak to the wummin'....so I came in and spoke to her....she asked me if I had my computer on and what was the key to the right of CTRL....I told her FN and she said to push the windows key to the right of that......at that point I twigged it was a scam and hung up....she phoned back imediately and I hung up again....I assumed it was a scam but the scarry thing was The wife would have fell for it....what info were they after after they took over the computer ? Who knows ? But they probably make a cent or two for every infected computer they can deliver to the bot networks. Crypto mining was in vogue a while back. is pushing the windows key one of the steps to give them control of your computer ? ... Thanks goodness you didn't push it. If you had pressed the windows key and R at the same time, they could have taken over your soul. Mind you, most changes would be an improvement. oh, that is so unfair the way you treat jimbo He has no soul to take over. -- Ian |
OT Nearly got scammed ...
On Wed, 03 Mar 2021 13:21:00 +0000, Jimmy Stewart ... wrote:
On 03/03/2021 13:18, T i m wrote: On Wed, 3 Mar 2021 13:07:28 +0000, "Jimmy Stewart ..." wrote: snip I did suggest to one that they 'sounded reasonably technical, why don't you get a genuine job in IT support?' and their reply was that there were none available. It is the only situation where I get to call them black *******s without fear of prosecution...tee hee Oh, that must be very rewarding for you. certainly is ..... And did you know they aren't typically 'black' in India? (Not that you would care just how accurate your racism was obviously). Cheers, T i m she was an Indian black ******* You cannot know she was born out of wedlock. |
OT Nearly got scammed ...
On 03/03/2021 13:04, charles wrote:
In article , Jimmy Stewart wrote: Wife got phone call this moning fom Virgin media and the indian caller in a busy call centre told her her computer was runing slow and she could speed things up...wife didn't have her laptop on and couldn't find her glasses so she hollered out the window to me in the font garden to come in and speak to the wummin'....so I came in and spoke to her....she asked me if I had my computer on and what was the key to the right of CTRL....I told her FN and she said to push the windows key to the right of that......at that point I twigged it was a scam and hung up....she phoned back imediately and I hung up again....I assumed it was a scam but the scarry thing was The wife would have fell for it....what info were they after after they took over the computer ? I had one of these calls a few months ago. When I said the key had a cogwheel on it, there was a long pause. Then "Is it a Windows computer?", to which I replied "No" and they hung up. I did that some time ago..got them all excited wasted half an hour of their time before they twigged i was running Linux. Unfortunately it also wasted half an hour of my time too. -- It is hard to imagine a more stupid decision or more dangerous way of making decisions than by putting those decisions in the hands of people who pay no price for being wrong. Thomas Sowell |
OT Nearly got scammed ...
On 03/03/2021 13:54, Jethro_uk wrote:
On Wed, 03 Mar 2021 13:52:30 +0000, The Natural Philosopher wrote: On 03/03/2021 13:04, charles wrote: In article , Jimmy Stewart wrote: Wife got phone call this moning fom Virgin media and the indian caller in a busy call centre told her her computer was runing slow and she could speed things up...wife didn't have her laptop on and couldn't find her glasses so she hollered out the window to me in the font garden to come in and speak to the wummin'....so I came in and spoke to her....she asked me if I had my computer on and what was the key to the right of CTRL....I told her FN and she said to push the windows key to the right of that......at that point I twigged it was a scam and hung up....she phoned back imediately and I hung up again....I assumed it was a scam but the scarry thing was The wife would have fell for it....what info were they after after they took over the computer ? I had one of these calls a few months ago. When I said the key had a cogwheel on it, there was a long pause. Then "Is it a Windows computer?", to which I replied "No" and they hung up. I did that some time ago..got them all excited wasted half an hour of their time before they twigged i was running Linux. Unfortunately it also wasted half an hour of my time too. Think of it as your good deed for the day - one less vulnerable person scammed in that time. I have a stupid neighbour and I am always finding he has been scammed, gets paranoid, changes all his passwords and then cant get any emåil or wifi. That because he insists on being on BT. When ever I get a phone call from 'BT ' 'about my internet' i tell them I am not on BT so **** off -- "I am inclined to tell the truth and dislike people who lie consistently. This makes me unfit for the company of people of a Left persuasion, and all women" |
OT Nearly got scammed ...
On 03/03/2021 13:42, jon wrote:
On Wed, 03 Mar 2021 13:21:00 +0000, Jimmy Stewart ... wrote: On 03/03/2021 13:18, T i m wrote: On Wed, 3 Mar 2021 13:07:28 +0000, "Jimmy Stewart ..." wrote: snip I did suggest to one that they 'sounded reasonably technical, why don't you get a genuine job in IT support?' and their reply was that there were none available. It is the only situation where I get to call them black *******s without fear of prosecution...tee hee Oh, that must be very rewarding for you. certainly is ..... And did you know they aren't typically 'black' in India? (Not that you would care just how accurate your racism was obviously). Cheers, T i m she was an Indian black ******* You cannot know she was born out of wedlock. Perhaps jimmy shagged her mother? -- Cheers, John. /================================================== ===============\ | Internode Ltd - http://www.internode.co.uk | |-----------------------------------------------------------------| | John Rumm - john(at)internode(dot)co(dot)uk | \================================================= ================/ |
OT Nearly got scammed ...
On 03/03/2021 13:42, jon wrote:
On Wed, 03 Mar 2021 13:21:00 +0000, Jimmy Stewart ... wrote: On 03/03/2021 13:18, T i m wrote: On Wed, 3 Mar 2021 13:07:28 +0000, "Jimmy Stewart ..." wrote: snip I did suggest to one that they 'sounded reasonably technical, why don't you get a genuine job in IT support?' and their reply was that there were none available. It is the only situation where I get to call them black *******s without fear of prosecution...tee hee Oh, that must be very rewarding for you. certainly is ..... And did you know they aren't typically 'black' in India? (Not that you would care just how accurate your racism was obviously). Cheers, T i m she was an Indian black ******* You cannot know she was born out of wedlock. bound to have been |
OT Nearly got scammed ...
On Wed, 03 Mar 2021 14:22:01 +0000, Jethro_uk wrote:
On Wed, 03 Mar 2021 14:06:37 +0000, The Natural Philosopher wrote: On 03/03/2021 13:54, Jethro_uk wrote: On Wed, 03 Mar 2021 13:52:30 +0000, The Natural Philosopher wrote: On 03/03/2021 13:04, charles wrote: In article , Jimmy Stewart wrote: Wife got phone call this moning fom Virgin media and the indian caller in a busy call centre told her her computer was runing slow and she could speed things up...wife didn't have her laptop on and couldn't find her glasses so she hollered out the window to me in the font garden to come in and speak to the wummin'....so I came in and spoke to her....she asked me if I had my computer on and what was the key to the right of CTRL....I told her FN and she said to push the windows key to the right of that......at that point I twigged it was a scam and hung up....she phoned back imediately and I hung up again....I assumed it was a scam but the scarry thing was The wife would have fell for it....what info were they after after they took over the computer ? I had one of these calls a few months ago. When I said the key had a cogwheel on it, there was a long pause. Then "Is it a Windows computer?", to which I replied "No" and they hung up. I did that some time ago..got them all excited wasted half an hour of their time before they twigged i was running Linux. Unfortunately it also wasted half an hour of my time too. Think of it as your good deed for the day - one less vulnerable person scammed in that time. I have a stupid neighbour and I am always finding he has been scammed, gets paranoid, changes all his passwords and then cant get any emåil or wifi. That because he insists on being on BT. When ever I get a phone call from 'BT ' 'about my internet' i tell them I am not on BT so **** off Not having a landline solves so many problems. I need one for my modem. |
OT Nearly got scammed ...
In article , The Natural Philosopher
wrote: On 03/03/2021 13:04, charles wrote: In article , Jimmy Stewart wrote: Wife got phone call this moning fom Virgin media and the indian caller in a busy call centre told her her computer was runing slow and she could speed things up...wife didn't have her laptop on and couldn't find her glasses so she hollered out the window to me in the font garden to come in and speak to the wummin'....so I came in and spoke to her....she asked me if I had my computer on and what was the key to the right of CTRL....I told her FN and she said to push the windows key to the right of that......at that point I twigged it was a scam and hung up....she phoned back imediately and I hung up again....I assumed it was a scam but the scarry thing was The wife would have fell for it....what info were they after after they took over the computer ? I had one of these calls a few months ago. When I said the key had a cogwheel on it, there was a long pause. Then "Is it a Windows computer?", to which I replied "No" and they hung up. I did that some time ago..got them all excited wasted half an hour of their time before they twigged i was running Linux. I was running RISC OS, as i am now. Unfortunately it also wasted half an hour of my time too. +! -- from KT24 in Surrey, England "I'd rather die of exhaustion than die of boredom" Thomas Carlyle |
OT Nearly got scammed ...
On 03/03/2021 14:47, charles wrote:
In article , The Natural Philosopher wrote: On 03/03/2021 13:04, charles wrote: In article , Jimmy Stewart wrote: Wife got phone call this moning fom Virgin media and the indian caller in a busy call centre told her her computer was runing slow and she could speed things up...wife didn't have her laptop on and couldn't find her glasses so she hollered out the window to me in the font garden to come in and speak to the wummin'....so I came in and spoke to her....she asked me if I had my computer on and what was the key to the right of CTRL....I told her FN and she said to push the windows key to the right of that......at that point I twigged it was a scam and hung up....she phoned back imediately and I hung up again....I assumed it was a scam but the scarry thing was The wife would have fell for it....what info were they after after they took over the computer ? I had one of these calls a few months ago. When I said the key had a cogwheel on it, there was a long pause. Then "Is it a Windows computer?", to which I replied "No" and they hung up. I did that some time ago..got them all excited wasted half an hour of their time before they twigged i was running Linux. I was running RISC OS, as i am now. Well full marks for rarity, I don't think everything I need is on RISCOS, sadly... Unfortunately it also wasted half an hour of my time too. +! -- People believe certain stories because everyone important tells them, and people tell those stories because everyone important believes them. Indeed, when a conventional wisdom is at its fullest strength, ones agreement with that conventional wisdom becomes almost a litmus test of ones suitability to be taken seriously. Paul Krugman |
OT Nearly got scammed ...
In article , The Natural Philosopher
wrote: On 03/03/2021 14:47, charles wrote: In article , The Natural Philosopher wrote: On 03/03/2021 13:04, charles wrote: In article , Jimmy Stewart wrote: Wife got phone call this moning fom Virgin media and the indian caller in a busy call centre told her her computer was runing slow and she could speed things up...wife didn't have her laptop on and couldn't find her glasses so she hollered out the window to me in the font garden to come in and speak to the wummin'....so I came in and spoke to her....she asked me if I had my computer on and what was the key to the right of CTRL....I told her FN and she said to push the windows key to the right of that......at that point I twigged it was a scam and hung up....she phoned back imediately and I hung up again....I assumed it was a scam but the scarry thing was The wife would have fell for it....what info were they after after they took over the computer ? I had one of these calls a few months ago. When I said the key had a cogwheel on it, there was a long pause. Then "Is it a Windows computer?", to which I replied "No" and they hung up. I did that some time ago..got them all excited wasted half an hour of their time before they twigged i was running Linux. I was running RISC OS, as i am now. Well full marks for rarity, I don't think everything I need is on RISCOS, sadly... Agreed; I also have a Windows10 Desktop. 2 Windows 10 laptops which can run Virtual Acorn, a RISC OS laptop (used for society accounts) and an iPad Pro on which I keep 'sheet' music. All my DTP work is done on RISC OS. Laptops were originally for taking proofs to 'customers' and, if necesssary, amending on the spot. Unfortunately it also wasted half an hour of my time too. +! -- from KT24 in Surrey, England "I'd rather die of exhaustion than die of boredom" Thomas Carlyle |
OT Nearly got scammed ...
"Jimmy Stewart" wrote in message ... Wife got phone call this moning fom Virgin media and the indian caller in a busy call centre told her her computer was runing slow and she could speed things up...wife didn't have her laptop on and couldn't find her glasses so she hollered out the window to me in the font garden to come in and speak to the wummin'....so I came in and spoke to her....she asked me if I had my computer on and what was the key to the right of CTRL....I told her FN and she said to push the windows key to the right of that......at that point I twigged it was a scam and hung up....she phoned back imediately and I hung up again....I assumed it was a scam but the scarry thing was The wife would have fell for it....what info were they after after they took over the computer ? what sort of intelligent person believes random caller that says "your computer is running slowly" How are they supposed to know this? do they have a camera installed in your house watching you, or something? |
OT Nearly got scammed ...
On 03/03/2021 15:45, tim... wrote:
what sort of intelligent person believes random caller that says "your computer is running slowly" (i) mostly unintelligent people (ii) or supposedly intelligent people who haven't a clue how *anything* works *at all* (C.f. 'Art Students'). How are they supposed to know this? do they have a camera installed in your house watching you, or something? Don't need that. traffic analysis can give you a clue actually. -- The theory of Communism may be summed up in one sentence: Abolish all private property. Karl Marx |
OT Nearly got scammed ...
In article , tim...
wrote: "Jimmy Stewart" wrote in message ... Wife got phone call this moning fom Virgin media and the indian caller in a busy call centre told her her computer was runing slow and she could speed things up...wife didn't have her laptop on and couldn't find her glasses so she hollered out the window to me in the font garden to come in and speak to the wummin'....so I came in and spoke to her....she asked me if I had my computer on and what was the key to the right of CTRL....I told her FN and she said to push the windows key to the right of that......at that point I twigged it was a scam and hung up....she phoned back imediately and I hung up again....I assumed it was a scam but the scarry thing was The wife would have fell for it....what info were they after after they took over the computer ? what sort of intelligent person believes random caller that says "your computer is running slowly" How are they supposed to know this? your router has reported this, of course do they have a camera installed in your house watching you, or something? -- from KT24 in Surrey, England "I'd rather die of exhaustion than die of boredom" Thomas Carlyle |
OT Nearly got scammed ...
"The Natural Philosopher" wrote in message ... On 03/03/2021 15:45, tim... wrote: what sort of intelligent person believes random caller that says "your computer is running slowly" (i) mostly unintelligent people (ii) or supposedly intelligent people who haven't a clue how *anything* works *at all* (C.f. 'Art Students'). How are they supposed to know this? do they have a camera installed in your house watching you, or something? Don't need that. traffic analysis can give you a clue actually. but that's a fault within their network not with my computer |
OT Nearly got scammed ...
On 03/03/2021 15:45, tim... wrote:
"Jimmy Stewart" wrote in message ... Wife got phone call this moning fom Virgin media and the indian caller in a busy call centre told her her computer was runing slow and she could speed things up...wife didn't have her laptop on and couldn't find her glasses so she hollered out the window to me in the font garden to come in and speak to the wummin'....so I came in and spoke to her....she asked me if I had my computer on and what was the key to the right of CTRL....I told her FN and she said to push the windows key to the right of that......at that point I twigged it was a scam and hung up....she phoned back imediately and I hung up again....I assumed it was a scam but the scarry thing was The wife would have fell for it....what info were they after after they took over the computer ? what sort of intelligent person believes random caller that says "your computer is running slowly" There are a lot of unintelligent people and intelligent ones that know little about computers. How are they supposed to know this? do they have a camera installed in your house watching you, or something? Lots of people know that Windows reports all sorts of things back to Microsoft and when they get a call from "Microsoft Support" they think it's real. |
OT Nearly got scammed ...
On 03/03/2021 15:45, tim... wrote:
"Jimmy Stewart" wrote in message ... Wife got phone call this moning fom Virgin media and the indian caller in a busy call centre told her her computer was runing slow and she could speed things up...wife didn't have her laptop on and couldn't find her glasses so she hollered out the window to me in the font garden to come in and speak to the wummin'....so I came in and spoke to her....she asked me if I had my computer on and what was the key to the right of CTRL....I told her FN and she said to push the windows key to the right of that......at that point I twigged it was a scam and hung up....she phoned back imediately and I hung up again....I assumed it was a scam but the scarry thing was The wife would have fell for it....what info were they after after they took over the computer ? what sort of intelligent person believes random caller that says "your computer is running slowly" How are they supposed to know this? do they have a camera installed in your house watching you, or something? problem is fecking Virgin media is slow even when a speed test says otherwise..... |
OT Nearly got scammed ...
On 03/03/2021 13:04, T i m wrote:
On Wed, 3 Mar 2021 12:00:48 +0000, GB wrote: snip is pushing the windows key one of the steps to give them control of your computer ? ... Thanks goodness you didn't push it. If you had pressed the windows key and R at the same time, they could have taken over your soul. Mind you, most changes would be an improvement. ;-) I really don't understand how / why most 'fully marbled' people could / would fall for any such things, unless they lived under a rock? Unfortunately the BIL has lived under a (technical) rock and not long after going online, fell for a scam and was tricked into moving a large chunk of his savings into a 'safe account' (theirs of course). Luckily he got it all back but ... People read the papers, watch the news, follow social media where warnings about this sort of scam are abundant but some still seem to fall for it? Because the scammers are adaptive. They know that people see the news about online threats, so they just play up that aspect of their pretext. If they can convince you they are your bank and they have managed to identify a scam in progress, the background knowledge can actually help them make the argument. -- Cheers, John. /================================================== ===============\ | Internode Ltd - http://www.internode.co.uk | |-----------------------------------------------------------------| | John Rumm - john(at)internode(dot)co(dot)uk | \================================================= ================/ |
OT Nearly got scammed ...
On Wed, 3 Mar 2021 17:17:58 +0000, John Rumm
wrote: snip People read the papers, watch the news, follow social media where warnings about this sort of scam are abundant but some still seem to fall for it? Because the scammers are adaptive. Of course and try to stay 'one step ahead' etc. They know that people see the news about online threats, so they just play up that aspect of their pretext. But we have the 'don't give your bank / credit card details / PIN / password to anyone who phones *you* rule that should deal with a fair percentage of the scammers. Then you have the 'don't give anyone (unknown / untrusted) remote access to your PC' group? Then you get the bogus delivery type. If they can convince you they are your bank and they have managed to identify a scam in progress, the background knowledge can actually help them make the argument. Sure, but so easily thwarted by hanging up and *phoning them* on a number you have or find (bill / Internet), not that they give you, on another line if you distrust the dialtone. But hey, given the amount of bank details I've seen blowing about from fly-tipped household waste I'm not sure you would need to actually bother the account holders at all! (And yet another example of how some people seem ignorant of the advice and so risks (identity fraud etc))? ;-( Straight cut shredders anyone? Cheers, T i m |
OT Nearly got scammed ...
Jimmy Stewart wrote
Wife got phone call this moning fom Virgin media and the indian caller in a busy call centre told her her computer was runing slow and she could speed things up...wife didn't have her laptop on and couldn't find her glasses so she hollered out the window to me in the font garden Didnt realise you baptised little kids in your garden. Funky... to come in and speak to the wummin'....so I came in and spoke to her.... she asked me if I had my computer on and what was the key to the right of CTRL....I told her FN and she said to push the windows key to the right of that......at that point I twigged it was a scam and hung up....she phoned back imediately and I hung up again....I assumed it was a scam but the scarry thing was The wife would have fell for it.... Time to trade her in on a new bimbo. what info were they after after they took over the computer ? Whatever is on it thats useful to them like you banking details and passwords etc. |
OT Nearly got scammed ...
"Jimmy Stewart" wrote in message ... On 03/03/2021 11:31, Jethro_uk wrote: On Wed, 03 Mar 2021 11:26:44 +0000, Jimmy Stewart wrote: Wife got phone call this moning fom Virgin media and the indian caller in a busy call centre told her her computer was runing slow and she could speed things up...wife didn't have her laptop on and couldn't find her glasses so she hollered out the window to me in the font garden to come in and speak to the wummin'....so I came in and spoke to her....she asked me if I had my computer on and what was the key to the right of CTRL....I told her FN and she said to push the windows key to the right of that......at that point I twigged it was a scam and hung up....she phoned back imediately and I hung up again....I assumed it was a scam but the scarry thing was The wife would have fell for it....what info were they after after they took over the computer ? Who knows ? But they probably make a cent or two for every infected computer they can deliver to the bot networks. Crypto mining was in vogue a while back. is pushing the windows key one of the steps to give them control of your computer ? ... Nope, just a simple way of working out what sort of computer you have. |
OT Nearly got scammed ...
"GB" wrote in message ... On 03/03/2021 11:40, Jimmy Stewart wrote: On 03/03/2021 11:31, Jethro_uk wrote: On Wed, 03 Mar 2021 11:26:44 +0000, Jimmy Stewart wrote: Wife got phone call this moning fom Virgin media and the indian caller in a busy call centre told her her computer was runing slow and she could speed things up...wife didn't have her laptop on and couldn't find her glasses so she hollered out the window to me in the font garden to come in and speak to the wummin'....so I came in and spoke to her....she asked me if I had my computer on and what was the key to the right of CTRL....I told her FN and she said to push the windows key to the right of that......at that point I twigged it was a scam and hung up....she phoned back imediately and I hung up again....I assumed it was a scam but the scarry thing was The wife would have fell for it....what info were they after after they took over the computer ? Who knows ? But they probably make a cent or two for every infected computer they can deliver to the bot networks. Crypto mining was in vogue a while back. is pushing the windows key one of the steps to give them control of your computer ? ... Thanks goodness you didn't push it. If you had pressed the windows key and R at the same time, they could have taken over your soul. Mind you, most changes would be an improvement. I'm not convince that hairy legged cross dressing haggis gorgers actually have soul. Black slaves never did have. Dogs and cats too. |
OT Nearly got scammed ...
On 03/03/2021 19:18, Rod Speed wrote:
Jimmy Stewart wrote Wife got phone call this moning fom Virgin media and the indian caller in a busy call centre told her her computer was runing slow and she could speed things up...wife didn't have her laptop on and couldn't find her glasses so she hollered out the window to me in the font garden Didnt realise you baptised little kids in your garden. Funky... to come in and speak to the wummin'....so I came in and spoke to her.... she asked me if I had my computer on and what was the key to the right of CTRL....I told her FN and she said to push the windows key to the right of that......at that point I twigged it was a scam and hung up....she phoned back imediately and I hung up again....I assumed it was a scam but the scarry thing was The wife would have fell for it.... Time to trade her in on a new bimbo. what info were they after after they took over the computer ? Whatever is on it thats useful to them like you banking details and passwords etc. but I have to put in my banking stuff manually...??? |
OT Nearly got scammed ...
"Jethro_uk" wrote in message ... On Wed, 03 Mar 2021 14:06:37 +0000, The Natural Philosopher wrote: On 03/03/2021 13:54, Jethro_uk wrote: On Wed, 03 Mar 2021 13:52:30 +0000, The Natural Philosopher wrote: On 03/03/2021 13:04, charles wrote: In article , Jimmy Stewart wrote: Wife got phone call this moning fom Virgin media and the indian caller in a busy call centre told her her computer was runing slow and she could speed things up...wife didn't have her laptop on and couldn't find her glasses so she hollered out the window to me in the font garden to come in and speak to the wummin'....so I came in and spoke to her....she asked me if I had my computer on and what was the key to the right of CTRL....I told her FN and she said to push the windows key to the right of that......at that point I twigged it was a scam and hung up....she phoned back imediately and I hung up again....I assumed it was a scam but the scarry thing was The wife would have fell for it....what info were they after after they took over the computer ? I had one of these calls a few months ago. When I said the key had a cogwheel on it, there was a long pause. Then "Is it a Windows computer?", to which I replied "No" and they hung up. I did that some time ago..got them all excited wasted half an hour of their time before they twigged i was running Linux. Unfortunately it also wasted half an hour of my time too. Think of it as your good deed for the day - one less vulnerable person scammed in that time. I have a stupid neighbour and I am always finding he has been scammed, gets paranoid, changes all his passwords and then cant get any emåil or wifi. That because he insists on being on BT. When ever I get a phone call from 'BT ' 'about my internet' i tell them I am not on BT so **** off Not having a landline solves so many problems. Wouldnt work for him, he cant work out how to answer an incoming call on a mobile. |
OT Nearly got scammed ...
"jon" wrote in message ... On Wed, 03 Mar 2021 14:22:01 +0000, Jethro_uk wrote: On Wed, 03 Mar 2021 14:06:37 +0000, The Natural Philosopher wrote: On 03/03/2021 13:54, Jethro_uk wrote: On Wed, 03 Mar 2021 13:52:30 +0000, The Natural Philosopher wrote: On 03/03/2021 13:04, charles wrote: In article , Jimmy Stewart wrote: Wife got phone call this moning fom Virgin media and the indian caller in a busy call centre told her her computer was runing slow and she could speed things up...wife didn't have her laptop on and couldn't find her glasses so she hollered out the window to me in the font garden to come in and speak to the wummin'....so I came in and spoke to her....she asked me if I had my computer on and what was the key to the right of CTRL....I told her FN and she said to push the windows key to the right of that......at that point I twigged it was a scam and hung up....she phoned back imediately and I hung up again....I assumed it was a scam but the scarry thing was The wife would have fell for it....what info were they after after they took over the computer ? I had one of these calls a few months ago. When I said the key had a cogwheel on it, there was a long pause. Then "Is it a Windows computer?", to which I replied "No" and they hung up. I did that some time ago..got them all excited wasted half an hour of their time before they twigged i was running Linux. Unfortunately it also wasted half an hour of my time too. Think of it as your good deed for the day - one less vulnerable person scammed in that time. I have a stupid neighbour and I am always finding he has been scammed, gets paranoid, changes all his passwords and then cant get any emåil or wifi. That because he insists on being on BT. When ever I get a phone call from 'BT ' 'about my internet' i tell them I am not on BT so **** off Not having a landline solves so many problems. I need one for my modem. But you dont have to have a phone plugged into it or even a phone service over it. |
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