how do you know its a scam? that is a link toJust received the following email (I have blanked my email address). The link won't work as this is a photo image
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thats a straing one. amazon emails are a pain at the moment my mobile has hundred of them on it i might copy the ones i know are safe and reset the phoneThanks Pete, but I already confirmed that my car is taxed for another 11 months. Plus the email address it came from is Spanish (.sp) - not sure if it is a hacked address. Reported to "phishing" and left it to them
I have had several of those. All reported as scams.Couple of texts this week using different mobile numbers….Hi Mum, I’ve broken my phone and it’s not working can you WhaysApp me on……..
i dont get the cranks now i am on full fiberHad an email yesterday inviting me to view 'lots of naked ladies' ............not tempted.
Ditto (that's three of us including Pedrocut #13). I really do think that something more should be done about these scams by the phone companies/banks/police. After all, it is a form of robbery, but I guess it isn't given enough priority to dedicate the resources to, that might stop or at least reduce the number of these particular phone scams.I have had several of those. All reported as scams.
The other problem is that there is SO much scamming going on unless the situation is particularly egregious, the return on effort is not worth it. We were scammed a few years ago with our wireless phones, the provider came after us for payment. They filed a delinquent credit report against us. The authorities and the local police threw their hands up. Fortunately, my brother-in-law is an attorney and went after the provider who cancelled the credit report and acknowledge that they had allowed the scam to develop. I would not recommend this approach because it is very expensive. Fortunately, my brother-in-law and I were partners in an investment property together.Ditto (that's three of us including Pedrocut #13). I really do think that something more should be done about these scams by the phone companies/banks/police. After all, it is a form of robbery, but I guess it isn't given enough priority to dedicate the resources to, that might stop or at least reduce the number of these particular phone scams.
I took my one to Action Fraud (which is the UK's national reporting centre for fraud), who passed it to the National Fraud Intelligence Bureau (NFIB) for review. The NFIB examine the information you provide and apparently where possible, "the information is also matched against other available data in order to enrich and corroborate the details of the fraud". The NFIB then assess "whether there are viable lines of enquiry that would enable a law enforcement body, such as the police service, to investigate".
In my case, although I provided a lot of detail, I received the response "On this occasion, based on the information currently available, it has not been possible to identify a line of enquiry which a law enforcement organisation in the United Kingdom could pursue." Although my e-mail response, did have the look of a template and I'm not convinced that a great deal of time was made available to review whether it was possible to try to seek out these scammers, I felt that I had at least tried to do my bit. The e-mail added, "Please be assured that by contacting us you are giving the police vital information that they need to protect you and others. The information you have provided may be used to disrupt criminal activity and inform prevention advice and campaigns".
Hopefully such reports that we make, might lead to convictions or at least this topic will hopefully lead to members of this site, thinking is this a scam? should they also become an intended victim of these awful scammers.
Hopefully they get some traction from this. There is significant upside for the scammers, I doubt they will be very compliant! Fingers crossed!I heard on last night's news that the government is belatedly banning all cold calls as part of a much needed national crackdown on scams that is expected to take effect from this summer. Last summer, 41 million people were targeted by suspicious calls and texts, according to Ofcom. The ban is to cover cold calls selling financial products as well as legitimate calls. Exactly which financial products will be covered will be decided after a consultation. Anyone who then receives a call trying to sell them such products will then know it's a scam.
In addition, "Sim Farms", where a large number of Sim cards are used to send text messages in bulk, will be banned. Intelligence services and police will work with overseas partners to shut down call centres engaged in fraud. Advertising campaigns will warn people about the risk of scam calls. There will be new measures to tackle phone number "spoofing", where scammers alter Caller ID information to make calls look genuine. A new fraud squad will also replace the current Action Fraud service with 500, rather than the current 120 investigators, within the year and this should make reporting fraud easier. Work with international partners will be stepped up and greater use made of the UK’s intelligence community to identify and disrupt more overseas fraudsters. Banks will be allowed to delay payments from being processed for longer to allow for the investigation of suspect payments.
"A new fraud squad will also replace the current Action Fraud service with 500, rather than the current 120 investigators". A few more coppers on the beat would not go amiss, either. Quite how they plan to ban the calls which often come from India and surrounding countries, I'd like to see.I heard on last night's news that the government is belatedly banning all cold calls as part of a much needed national crackdown on scams that is expected to take effect from this summer. Last summer, 41 million people were targeted by suspicious calls and texts, according to Ofcom. The ban is to cover cold calls selling financial products as well as legitimate calls. Exactly which financial products will be covered will be decided after a consultation. Anyone who then receives a call trying to sell them such products will then know it's a scam.
In addition, "Sim Farms", where a large number of Sim cards are used to send text messages in bulk, will be banned. Intelligence services and police will work with overseas partners to shut down call centres engaged in fraud. Advertising campaigns will warn people about the risk of scam calls. There will be new measures to tackle phone number "spoofing", where scammers alter Caller ID information to make calls look genuine. A new fraud squad will also replace the current Action Fraud service with 500, rather than the current 120 investigators, within the year and this should make reporting fraud easier. Work with international partners will be stepped up and greater use made of the UK’s intelligence community to identify and disrupt more overseas fraudsters. Banks will be allowed to delay payments from being processed for longer to allow for the investigation of suspect payments.
Seriously, think of the cost and lost opportunity with law enforcers to do all of that. Unless the penalty is severe it will not stop!"A new fraud squad will also replace the current Action Fraud service with 500, rather than the current 120 investigators". A few more coppers on the beat would not go amiss, either. Quite how they plan to ban the calls which often come from India and surrounding countries, I'd like to see.
If that is showing your email address you might want to obscure it.Got this in an email today.,
I wouldn't myself. Have you tried "Who called me UK" (see below) it's a free service that provides an overall user rating for the mystery phone number that you input, along with it's location, who operates the number and whether it has been identified as a phone contact scam. It also includes comments from people that have answered calls from that same number.I keep receiving calls from area codes where I do not know anyone, Had one from Bodmin, Ballymena, Leicester in the last 5 days. I simply do not answer and just block the number. Curious though I may answer the next one.
Thank you John I will look at this later...appreciateI wouldn't myself. Have you tried "Who called me UK" (see below) it's a free service that provides an overall user rating for the mystery phone number that you input, along with it's location, who operates the number and whether it has been identified as a phone contact scam. It also includes comments from people that have answered calls from that same number.
Who called me? | Free Reverse Phone Lookup
Received a call from unknown phone number. Use this FREE reverse phone directory to find out who called you!who-called.co.uk
I've used "who called me" for some time now by just clicking onto it after searching for it, no problems identified by eset for me.Just tried loading this but Eset blocked it saying there is a threat