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nunthewiser - he wants my pay pal email address so he can send me his money.
But we know he wants the pay pal email address so he can hack into it or something.
I'v heard of scams asking for us to make payments, but not asking us for them to pay us lol. its different now.
Im suprised that they are on carsales now, theyr all over the place!
The latest scam appears to originate from Telstra, or at least they're using Telstra's name.
Here is what happened to me on my mobile phone:
A call comes in from an unknown number: "This is Telstra. It is not a marketing call. We need to talk to Andrew Fraser. Please press ..."
I broke off the first call; ignored the second call because I was driving, which then left a voice recording on my message bank. Retrieving that message has then been charged to my account - GRRR!
But I didn't ring their 1800 number.
As I'm not Andrew Fraser and don't know anyone by that name in my immediate circle of friends, I took the third call this morning to try and stop the calls. I tapped through those menu options - no, he can't come to the phone; no, I don't want to tell him to call 1800...; no, don't send me an SMS - until a call centre operator introduced herself. If I didn't want Andrew Fraser to be cut off, please get him to the phone right now. So I told her I wasn't Andrew Fraser, didn't know an Andrew Fraser, and her database must be wrong: "Sorry, I can't help you. Please take this number off your list and stop calling me!"
"If you're not Andrew Fraser, who are you? What's your address and phone number?"
"I am not Andrew Fraser. You got the wrong number."
"Sorry, I need to know who you are to correct my database."
yeah, right, girl: Your computer called me and now you would like to know my details.
I repeated that my name and address was none of her business; this number isn't even with Telstra; so knock it off and stop calling. She again repeated her request. I hung up. So far, no further call ... yet.
PS: It occurred to me that the voice mail that had been left earlier had come on my second number. (My mobile has dual SIM, but neither with Telstra.) What's the chance that "Andrew Fraser" had two contact numbers that happen to match both my numbers???
If anyone has been receiving similar phishy calls, please add your experience to this thread.
They're still looking for Andrew Fraser.
I received two calls today again: one early morning, the second a few minutes ago. Both from an "unknown" number. Same shpiel "This is Telstra, this is not a marketing call..." and they need to speak to Andrew Fraser (inserted by a second female robot voice).
I hung up both times, didn't even "press one"
Why don't you say you are Andrew Fraser and see what they want ?
I feel so included now. I had missed call/message from a bloke with a strong Indian accent telling me I better call him back regarding my apparent tax evasion and fraud.
02 88804460
"to avoid consequences of tax evasion and tax fraud"
Gee what should I do..... I've already run around frantically with my underpants on my head.
02 88804460
Can somebody "please explain".
How is a bank account number going to help a scam artist here or in Nigeria or anywhere else?
In this thread and elsewhere there are these little stories of people saying look how clever I was, not gonna fall for this, etc.
I'm not having a go at you, pixel or anyone else. Sorry if it comes across like that. I've always been puzzled. How can they extract money with just a bank account number?
I have my bank account number published in my eBay adverts and so do thousands of sellers. I could publish it right here, but I won't. What would it prove anyway?
When you have explained that, here is the next question: IF I was gullible enough to also hand out my login access code/password ( a real big no-no, of course ), how would you extract money with that? How do you get your hands on the actual money in my account? I understand that you could look at the balance. You could pay some of your bills with Bpay. That would be a nuisance, but traceable by the bank if they want to.
To use the 'Pay Anyone' function, you will need the answer to a 'secret' question. There is no way of guessing that.
I'm hoping that somebody can explain this to me.
If all you can say is that the account # would only be the first step, next they will ask for the password, yes, of course, at some point they will have enough information to do some damage. But is that really it? They're collecting information bit by bit with phone calls?
Again, I'm not having a go at people; it's just that I can't understand how an account number by itself needs to be protected.
received 2 emails in the last 24 hours using my Linked in title/details and sending me(aka my company) an invoice for $2000+ supposely from another australian company (whose details changes and are probably true) and a word attachment (I did not even open) with the details of the bank transfer I should do ASAP as i am 4 days behind
2k is probably overambitious as 200$ would net many more IMHO but, be aware especially if you do not handle your own accounting.
Thanks, do not worry, I am in IT and manage my own accounting so not an easy target but I would bet they are successfull, and would be even more if asking 200$ instead.These types of emails, stating we are late or behind on our supposed payment, are just another ploy or tactic at social engineering preying on our wish to stay credit worthy!
At first glance this may "look" like a word doc but it is not.
It is a nasty that will install itself unbeknown to the user and can and will do any number of malicious things, including downloading more nasties including key loggers and again, all unbeknown to you the user.
I get these type of emails with said invoice/quote/whatever attached and all "look" kosher. Always check the senders email addy and hover over any link in the email to ascertain the authenticity of the email. If it doesn't look or feel right, delete post haste!
@Habakuk. As I'm a little tech savvy, after giving away a false bank acc. # to see where this lead, I've had these grubs trying to elicit the access password or PIN. Oh the fun I had on those occasions.
Thanks, do not worry, I am in IT and manage my own accounting so not an easy target but I would bet they are successfull, and would be even more if asking 200$ instead.
The other ones are from company telling you your website will be deregistered from...their SEO program (in fine print) so urgently send xxx $;
The sad bit here is that except for the print size it is nearly OK; pretend to try to sell you a service but play on the presentation to confuse and get you to understand a different meaning: even more twisted...
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