How People Respond to Scammers

Almost everyone is used to getting scam calls, scam texts, scam emails and so on.

Most people know they need to be careful – don’t click links in unsolicited emails, don’t trust someone on the phone just because they say they work for your bank or your Internet provider or the government etc.

And generally, people recognise and delete scam messages, emails etc. without wasting time on them.

However, for some people, getting scam calls is a real problem as they don’t want to be rude to the nice person on the phone telling them they have a problem with their computer and offering to help, for example.

When it’s someone on your doorstep telling you there is a roof tile is missing and needs to be fixed, it can be even more difficult to tell them to go away.

You have to recognise that these people will say anything and do anything to steal your money and they don’t care what hardship they may cause you.

They don’t scam people because they cannot afford food – it’s because they want to cheat you or are just unwilling to work for a living.

Trying to reason with these people is generally a complete waste of time – they have decided to spend their time lying, cheating and stealing from people and don’t care about the consequences to their victims. So anything you say will be meaningless to them.

Your basic approaches are:

A. Just delete the messages or put down the phone

B. On a phone call tell the caller you know it’s a scam and end the conversation. With emails and text messages just delete them as responding to these just means you get registered on scam sucker lists and will get even more messages

or

C. Play along and waste the scammer’s time. It won’t stop them permanently but does stop them temporarily as they cannot scam someone else while on the line to you.

Playing along can just mean continuing to listen to the caller and perhaps asking questions, but not doing anything they say and not giving them any information about yourself.

But you can go a stage further and waste their time using any approach you choose, for example some people have used these ideas:

  1. Act really interested. Jill says “I just tell them to just wait for a minute while you answer the door, put your phone down and just forget about it”
  2. Try to sell them something imaginary – B.B. says “I pick whatever is to hand – once it was old clothes so I tried to sell her on heritage pre-worn clothing and another time I had just made some cakes, so I tried to sell the scammer boxes of those. Not for real of course – just to waste their time”
  3. Pretty much keep saying “can you hold on a second?” And then put them on hold for five minutes. Get back on, say a few words, let them start talking, then say “oh dear, can you hang on again? Be right back” (ignore them saying “no, you can’t”, just pretend you didn’t hear them).
  4. William says that he tries to convert the caller to the Church of the Astounding Philistinism and goes into long meaningless sermons
  5. Francine says she starts telling the caller a sob story – usually one from some weepy movie she’s recently watched.

Have fun and waste their time.

If you have any experiences with these scams do let me know, by email.

Fightback Ninja Signature

 

Stupidest Spam of the Week Magic Fruit

There are endless health remedy scams – everything from lost Tibetan herbs that make you superhuman to teas that cure cancer to vegetables that reverse every known ailment and so on with whatever fantasy remedy the scammers can think up.

Everyone beyond a certain age has vision problems – usually correctable with spectacles but for some much more severe.

This latest scam is about a magic fruit – one slice before bed each night will give you a sudden 100% improvement in your eyesight. ”imagine being able to see twice as well, instantly”.

The phrase ‘see twice as well’ doesn’t really have any meaning as it depends which facet of sight is being talked about.

The email goes into raptures about doctors falling off their chairs after this fruit fixed people’s eyes in just 15 minutes.

The picture of the fruit is a little odd as it is deliberately out of focus but appears to be a fig. Nice though they are, there’s nothing magical about figs and they certainly don’t fix long term eyesight problems instantly.

To enter your email address and click on the subscribe button on top right to keep up to date with new posts.

Fightback Ninja Signature

SpamArrest

SpamArrest is an online service that claims to protect your mailbox from 100% of spam messages.

Their motto is “Take Control of Your Inbox!”

www.spamarrest.com

Key Features

  • Patented challenge/response technology blocks 100% of automated spam.
  • Get a new email address ([email protected]), as well as protect your existing mailboxes.
  • Access your email using POP3/IMAP-compatible program such as Outlook or Eudora, or from anywhere using the webmail system.

More Features:

  • SMTP is a standard protocol used for sending email and when you send email through the Spam Arrest SMTP server or webmail, the person you are sending email to is automatically added to your whitelist.
  • Protect and consolidate up to 5 of your existing email accounts into one spam-free mailbox.
  • 1GB mail storage
  • Whitelist options – You can authorize incoming messages based on sender email, sender domain, recipient email, mailing list email, and more.
  • Disposable email addresses available
  • Anti-virus protection
  • Anti-phishing protection
  • Customizable challenge email Add a custom message to the challenge email that is sent to unknown senders.
  • Mailbox forwarding Forward your Spam Arrest inbox to another email account or wireless device.
  • Confirmed email delivery Find out when people read the email that you sent to them.
  • Mail delivery rules Automatically perform various actions (discard, forward, copy/move to folder) upon the arrivals of new email, based on specified criteria.

If you have any experiences with these scams do let me know, by email.

Fightback Ninja Signature

 

Missed Parcel Delivery Card

parcel graphic

Huge numbers of parcels are delivered by Royal Mail and if you’re not at home when the postman calls then she leaves a card telling you where and when  you can pick up the item and a phone number for more information.

But scammers have been creating fake ‘missed delivery” cards that look very similar to the original Royal Mail version which is called the ‘Something For You’ card.

The scammer posts the fake card through your door and hopes that you phone the number on the card.

If you do, it’s a very expensive call to a long recorded message and you will may only notice when your phone bill arrives just how expensive it was.

There are other variants on this scam, including one where the delivery is claimed to be highly valuable and you must phone urgently or one where you have to phone and pay a charge for re-delivery. Of course there is no such item.

Take care before calling the number on any mail delivery cards put through your letter box.

If you have any experiences with scammers, spammers or time-waster do let me know, by email.

Fightback Ninja Signature