• Ganesh Venugopal@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    As an Indian, I would like to congratulate everyone here, you tax returns are here, but there is a spelling mistake in your name and it would take $5000 to correct it, please call 1800420SCAM to get your refund.

    bad jokes aside, these are the scum of the country and I am sorry for this shit.

    • Empricorn@feddit.nl
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      1 year ago

      If we’re apologizing for national issues that aren’t our fault, I’d like to say sorry for mass-shootings, exploiting poor people and the widening wealth-gap, and (worst of all) obnoxiously loud Americans abroad!

    • EmperorHenry@discuss.tchncs.de
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      1 year ago

      Hey! Someone from India!

      I watch lots of scambaiting videos and I know all about the public sentiment you guys have about scammers

      It’s a damn shame the police in India are so easy to bribe… not that American cops are any better

      American cops will rob you and then arrest you too.

      There’s normally at least one person waiting at the door to every scam call center waiting to give a big bag of money to the police to go away

      Sometimes the guy at the door will direct the cops to a legit call center to throw them off

    • dingleberry@discuss.tchncs.de
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      1 year ago

      I know Truecaller is a privacy nightmare, but that could still help old / tech illiterate people against being scammed. Is this not available in the US?

    • Lifted_lowered@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Nah, Indian people are not to blame. This post is just racist, white people do the same kind of scams just as often but the OP only notices the ones where the call center agent sounds like an accent they associate with Indian people.

      • Ganesh Venugopal@lemmy.ml
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        1 year ago

        thank you for looking out for us brownies out there, but unfortunately no, most of the scammers are in India and Nigeria (two developing countries). Indian people are not to blame 100% but we are not doing anything at all to stop this shit, trust me once you see how rotten the system is here, you will understand how the government and law enforcement are not taking action against this.

        I mean, of c the economy, lack of jobs and knowledge of English language have made them fertile soil for these types of scam camps.

        • Lifted_lowered@lemmy.world
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          I’m well aware of the economic factors at play driving scammers from India and Nigeria to do their thing. I am trying to bring attention to the white European scam phone banks that don’t have the same reputation, your Bulgarian and Romanian and Latvian scammers, Russian, etc. There are also scam call centers in the good ol USA. It’s definitely not just restricted to the two developing nations with a large number of English speakers and few opportunities that are blamed for it.

          • Eheran@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            You said this post is racist, despite basically agreeing? You actually only what that other, much smaller, “scam-countries” also get named?

            • Lifted_lowered@lemmy.world
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              1 year ago

              Please learn to read if you think I agreed. Please cope and seethe about the fact that I correctly identified this post as casually racist, ethnocentric Reddit bullshit.

              • PissinSelfNdriveway@sh.itjust.works
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                1 year ago

                You must be trying to set the record for how many times you can comment the word “cope” in one comment section. Reddit is the place you are looking for if you are after that kinda thing.

                • Lifted_lowered@lemmy.world
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                  You need to keep coping, especially because I seem to have triggered you deeply by pointing out your racism. Your tears amuse me. I suggest you cry more.

        • Lifted_lowered@lemmy.world
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          I suggest you cry more, and cope harder about the fact that I correctly identified OP’s racist perspective.

          • PissinSelfNdriveway@sh.itjust.works
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            Haha yes yes I’m the one doing the crying, not the commenters here that are gonna make an emergency visit to their therapist because they read the word indian.

            • Lifted_lowered@lemmy.world
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              You seem pretty mad for someone who’s just laughing, actually. I suggest you either go develop some sense of self-awareness and work on your ignorant racism, or just cry more, I don’t care.

                • Lifted_lowered@lemmy.world
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                  1 year ago

                  Who are you? A sad little racist who will never leave his mom’s basement, chiming in to give your opinion about how much you think I care? You’re pathetic LMAO

  • starman2112@sh.itjust.works
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    1 year ago

    I know it clearly works, and old people do definitely fall for it, but I’ll never understand how. What part of the script makes it sound reasonable that the IRS would want amazon gift cards instead of, you know, a cash transfer or something?

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      They make it sound like they are only notifying you that you are about to be arrested. They don’t ask for payment and fake refuse the first offer if the mark offers. Then, when the madk is very worried they are about to go to jail, it is much easier for them to believe whatever because it’s harder to think when you are panicking. So something like “our payment system is down so we cant take payment with cards right now. You need to pay within 30 minutes or I can’t reverse it. I guess I can pay out of pocket, but you need to get me the equal amount of gift cards” or some shit like that.

    • hstde@feddit.de
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      1 year ago

      Gullible, scared, lack of critical thinking, blindly following authorities, there are many reasons. It’s not only old people, thought.

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        1 year ago

        Don’t forget pathological problems like forgetfulness, dementia, and Alzheimer’s. Scammers have no qualms with stealing from people with disabilities.

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      I’m convinced it’s because a shit load of old people have committed, and so far gotten away with, serious crimes at some point.

      Random calls from “authority” decades later stun locks their brain in a memory loop.

        • SolarNialamide@lemm.ee
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          I used to hang out with hippies and artists and the age range is quite large there. There was this dude in his 70s who would casually talk about the time he helped get rid of a body after a murder acquaintances of his did in the 60s or 70s or something. He was actually put on trial and got convicted in the 80s when one the people who did the actual murder couldn’t live with the guilt and confessed but managed to get it overturned when he appealed and got acquitted, in part because they never found the body because like 5 years after they disposed of it they put a new highway right over it. Old people are fucking wild lol

      • Haui@discuss.tchncs.de
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        Thats equally dark and intriguing. Can you elaborate how you arrived at this conclusion? What serious crimes have you „believably“ heard of so far?

        • _stranger_@lemmy.world
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          Worked in a call center once connecting terminally Ill old people to nurses (a specialized aska nurse line essentially).

          My job was just to call people who needed a call back and then hand them off to a nurse when they answered the phone. I’m talking like 15 seconds of phone time with these people on average.

          The shit I heard in those 15 seconds was wild.

          “Can’t talk, I’m on the other line with Jesus” was one of my favorite dark replies from a person with essentially terminal COPD.

          But there were plenty of “I lived a bad life, I know why this is happening to me” type digressions.

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            Jeez! Thats really something. I would still assume they just didn’t go to church enough and thought this was their reckoning or so. In any case, you have guts my friend. That would have ruined my mental health.

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      Many real scams are not this obvious, plus a lot of old people are senile to some degree, which these scammers are exploiting. My grandma was contacted by “her bank” about verifying her identity, and after a few minutes of establishing a backstory they asked her for her debit card info including CVV. It all sounded very legit, and they even “transferred her to another department” with hold music and everything. Luckily, she didn’t fall for it.

    • starelfsc2@sh.itjust.works
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      along with other replies generally you become more gullible/less able to think of alternative explanations as you age, so even some “obvious” scams look legit

    • DrM@feddit.de
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      It’s the amount of money that makes it worth it. If they are successfull the amount is usually something like $10,000-$30,000. If they are only successful once every 2000 calls thats still worth it. Now you would say 2000 calls with 50 people in a call center means they are only successful once every few days and you are totally correct. But you have to put this into consideration with what they are usually paid. If you work in IT for huge companies like Accenture or McKinsey you will earn around 8-10k if you are in upper management and 6-8k if you are a normal worker. That’s yearly. So every successful scam for these scam companies pays up to 5 peoples yearly salary

    • Honytawk@lemmy.zip
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      Scammers intentionally use typo’s to weed out the intelligent people.

      They pry on the lowest denominators, since they know they can convince them of anything.

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    1 year ago

    I get unexplainable joy watching scammers get scammed on YouTube.

    My favourite scam scammer is kitboga.

  • pH3ra@lemmy.ml
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    Yet they still have the courage to say “my generation was smarter than kids these days”

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        I’ve known stupid people my age no matter my age

        I also defy anyone reading this not to have done something dumb in their lives

        • Akagigahara@lemmy.world
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          Scammers evolve to find new prey. While the phone scams and the different types of phishing might still work, I am quite that’s not where most of the money is now.

          We’ve seen kickstarter, bitcoin, mlm scams and what not. There’s enough out there that have not been properly identified, too.

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            Also, no matter who you are, there’s a way to get you. Some might be too high effort to try but if you AI impersonated my wife’s voice, spoofed her number and said the right things, you could probably scam me if you called when she was at work

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      People only think theyre smarter because there wasnt social media to show how stupid they really were.

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    We’re all gonna get old and some of us are going to get dementia. I have a hard time pointing at vulnerable people whose brains are nearly expired and saying “Haha jeez what noobs, how could they be such idiots?”

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      It’s pretty easy when they do the same to younger people.

      Autistic? No you’re not you’re just an asshole.

      ADHD? No you’re not you’re just lazy and annoying.

      Fuck em. Not my fault they voted against their self interests to the point they can’t get medical assistance for their brain rot.

      • Carl@sh.itjust.works
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        As someone who is autistic, I sometimes come off as brash. I try to hard to get everyone to like me, but I speak without a filter.

        • LukeMedia@lemmy.world
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          As someone also on the spectrum, I’m sorry but I say what my mind says, I don’t fully understand all the dancing around statements that people do. Just tell me what you mean, and I’ll do the same for you.

  • some_guy@lemmy.sdf.org
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    I had a moment with one of these around 2010. Car insurance scam and these weren’t in the news all the time. Much lower pressure and I still had my card in my hand before I thought to ask what model car I had. He hung up.

    • Captain Aggravated@sh.itjust.works
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      I’m kinda convinced Dell sold my details to Indian scammers. I didn’t have my laptop long before I started getting calls from “Dell Apple Microsoft tech support” about the computer sending them virus reports. I’m sure wanting me to let them remote into the machine, or run some other computer-based scam.

      They had to have gotten the info from Dell; they knew the model number of the machine.

      So I had someone who spoke with a thick accent wanting me to press Ctrl+Alt+R or whatever the run dialog hotkey in Windows is and run some commands. So I did exactly what he wanted me to do. And nothing happened. Because Linux Mint doesn’t bind anything to Ctrl+Alt+R by default. Last thing I heard him say was “Listen, you fucking guy…”

      I should have wasted more of his time, the parasite.

      • some_guy@lemmy.sdf.org
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        I had the complete opposite experience with a client where the scammer kept telling me to click on the Start menu even after I goaded him by telling him we were on a Mac. No ability to shift the scheme.

        • tryptaminev@feddit.de
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          The scams are run by professional call centers. Sometimes as a side business of an otherwise normal call center. The people working there are call center workers. They have a script and they follow the script. They could have no knowledge of the underlying tech at all.

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    God, my mom just got nailed by one of these this weekend. It’s easy for people to be like “how could you be so stupid?” But the people running this shit are so manipulative and demanding, all they need to do is to be forceful and threatening. Protect yourselves and your loved ones, folks.

    • This is fine🔥🐶☕🔥@lemmy.world
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      If they start threatening, can’t you just say ‘I need to discuss this with my lawyer’ and cut the call? Or start asking information from them so you can share it with your lawyer?

      • Patches@sh.itjust.works
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        You can hang up at any time for any reason for every single phone call you participate in. Nobody is going to jail over a phone call.

          • Krauerking@lemy.lol
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            LoL ok so like… I think a long history will show phone calls can be a big deal, but Aunt Toottie isn’t gonna send swat for you hanging up and neither would the IRS if you said “No, I want to hang up and go through the whole queue for hours just to make sure you are real.” If you get called by a number claiming to be them.

  • ioen@lemm.ee
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    I don’t get how scams work. Every time I get a scam call I stay on the line or press 1 or whatever to find out what the scam is, but no one ever tries to scam me. They just act like a normal business till I hang up. Can they tell by your voice you aren’t gullible or something?

    • ioen@lemm.ee
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      Been thinking about it and my theory is it’s a plausible deniability thing.

      Company A runs the robocaller which says “You owe $250”, then forwards the call to Company B. They ask what you want and you say “I need to make a payment of $250”. If you say anything else they pretend they don’t know what you mean. Company B can record their calls and prove they never asked anyone for money, it all came from people volunteering to pay. They might have to return it but they can act like it’s an honest mistake.

      • Patches@sh.itjust.works
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        This would only work if they were liable for anything, anything at all.

        These people are based on countries that say “Good on you for tricking dumb Westerner. Fuck them”. Nobody is ever going to intervene to stop them.

        • ioen@lemm.ee
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          But then I don’t get why they never ask me for money? When I get through to the scammer they just ask what I want. I’ll say “they said something about me owing money”, and they act like they don’t know what I’m talking about and get annoyed with me for wasting their time.

          If the deal is “they take your money and will never get in trouble” then what’s the downside to just running the script on everyone who calls?

  • CADmonkey@lemmy.world
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    My wife and I cared for her grandmother in her final years. This old woman learned to hand the phone to me when it was a scammer because I’d hassle them with whatever persona I wanted to use that day. I’m no Kitboga but she thought it was funny. And nobody got any money from her.

    It seemed like they would try to get some small amount from her at first - like $250. She got caught out by it once, where she paid them the small amount, then they would come back “needing” a larger (five-figure) amount.

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    If it’s important, they’ll leave a message so I can call them back. That’s my policy if I don’t recognize the number.

  • Marxism-Fennekinism@lemmy.ml
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    Here in Canada we have tons of “your package is here and you need to pay fees/taxes to get it” scam calls and texts. It sounds reasonable enough if you are actually waiting for a package and aren’t too savy about these things. The worst part is real delivery companies do sometimes contact you that way, though they usually text you and direct you to their site which can be verified (always always check the URL of the site and also make sure it’s HTTPS). Still I once disregarded a real one asking me to pay taxes and ended up actually delaying my package.

    The most disgusting ones I’ve gotten are the immigration scam calls, basically “there’s a problem with your PR card or it’s expired or something and if you don’t pay a fee right now you’ll be deported.” In Mandarin too, really exploiting the fears of immigrants. I’m still trying to figure out if it’s actually targeted since I actually am a Chinese immigrant (now a Canadian citizen so don’t even have a PR card anymore) or if they just randomly call different numbers, but I’ve only gotten robocalls in English or Mandarin which I speak and no other languages, so IDK. Anyone know?

    • Tavarin@lemmy.ca
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      If you’re in Toronto or have a Toronto number they target Mandarin since it’s incredibly prevalent in the city. Those are also the only 2 languages I receive as well.

    • meatMech@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      I’m also Canadian and I do get random calls in Mandarin sometimes. I didn’t know what they saying so I just hung up, but I guess it’s likely they were scam calls along these lines.

    • dandu3@lemmy.world
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      HTTPS means nothing. All sites are HTTPS these days. If your only check for a scam is that then you’re fucked

      • Marxism-Fennekinism@lemmy.ml
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        Correct, which is why you primarily need to check the URL and particularly the domain. I mention HTTPS because if you’re on the right domain and it’s not HTTPS when it should be, you’re most likely getting MITM’d or another such attack is being used.

  • EmperorHenry@discuss.tchncs.de
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    People who fall for scams like those aren’t always stupid.

    They’re not always old people

    With the IRS scam, they usually use the remote desktop software they direct you to to lock you out of your device

    Then they’ll extort you for the thousands of dollars worth of gift cards

    After they have the codes from the gift cards they’ll exchange them for crypto currency and/or sell them for even more than what’s on them

    And after the scam is done they keep the connections on all the remote desktop apps open so they can spy on them for future scams