Can't imagine why anyone would fake a number to look as if it came from India0091... would be India (or faked).

Can't imagine why anyone would fake a number to look as if it came from India0091... would be India (or faked).
[email protected]Here’s a new one I’ve not had before, an email telling me my Disney+ account has expired (I don’t have one), but I can extend for free for ninety days as part of the loyalty programme. Of course, they need my credit card details to verify my account.
Looked on the Disney website for an address to forward phishing emails to for their attention, but looks like they don’t have one as the help page just says delete the email and don’t click any links.
Sorry if this has been raised already in this thread but 60 pages are a lot to go through ...
Why do telecom companies allow callers to display false numbers rather than the number they are actually calling from? How difficult would it to be stop this facility?
And why do banks allow money to be paid into accounts obviously run by scammers?
Because all phone numbers are ‘virtual’ - or became so after System X and AXE10 Exchanges began rolling out in the mid 70’s. The old numbers were mapped to a line identity at the exchange, which was also used for billing. Fully digital lines of end users with ISDN would be given a ‘block’ of numbers. 30 if it was ISDN 30, 10 if ISDN 2 (or 2e). The customer could decide what number(s) to use, just 1 - for Call centre use, or anything from the allocated range - this allowed DDI (Direct Dialling In) to PABX’s that did away with switchboard. Unscrupulous firms found that they could make their PABX show (‘present’ in the parlance) not just their allocated line numbers, but anything at all - this was to facilitate 0800, 0345 or any other number that could be routed to the firm. Meanwhile, the analogue PSTN was locked down, with no ability for the renter to change the line number shown - only cause it not to be shown to other analogue customers (Firms with ISDN lines got the number anyway with a flag saying ‘do not display’)
There can be many legitimate reasons why a ’false’ number needs to be used - a hospital ward calling out should show its main number for returning calls. The days of ‘withheld’ numbers are universally disliked, as ACR (Anonymous Call Rejection) saw to that. The signalling standard for digital lines allowed for it - across the world - so inbound calls from India or the Philippines whether genuine or fake, can have any number programmed into it - even VOIP ‘soft’ phones let you select what number your call recipients will see. I agree it’s not ideal, but even the bank card scams - where the real number is spoofed is no reason to accept it at face value, and the public needs to realise this.
Change took place in April 1990 when the DVLC (established 1965) became an executive agency of the Department of Transport.On a side note, (mods please split this to a new thread if you deem it necessary), does anyone know when and why the DVLC was changed to become the DVLA?
I had one of those. I was expecting a parcel and spent a whole 2 seconds cursing the shipper for not notifying me of despatch before seeing the redelivery charge. It was a very good fakeI have just had a missed delivery Email from Evri wanting £1.60 to redeliver looked very good even named the van driver
the thing that pointed out that it was a scam was no name or address on the Email
I recall several pages back that this 'Premium Number' scam was unlikely. I think this sort of call more likely a way of finding out what numbers are active and have people willing to push buttons?New one to me : a recorded call with an English accent that my water supply was to be interrupted. I was supposed to press "1" to confirm I had received the message or "2" to hear it again. They called again 10 minutes later, and this time I let it run out of steam and they hung up. Up the thread there was a discussion on whether pressing a button could start a premium charge against you - surely this must be the point of this scam.
The caller was a 0115 number (Nottinham, but possibly spoofed), can't remember it now, but the Whocalledme website had over a thousand reports on it, and it also used "electricity supply interruptions" and "storm weather warnings" as the pretext. Some calls are reported to come in the small hours - perhaps that is because they came from abroad and get our time wrong, or thay want to make it seem more important, or they want to catch you when you are dozy.
I'd go further than 'unlikely' and put it well and truly in the urban legend category. I cannot conceive of any way that a call from A to B can be converted into a call from B to C, unless B hangs up the original call.I recall several pages back that this 'Premium Number' scam was unlikely.
a recorded call with an English accent that my water supply was to be interrupted
I now believe it was genuine because I have since noticed a text message on my phone saying the same thing, this time from Welsh Water. But the phone call was from 0115 9338000 which is not a number that appears anywhere in Welsh Water's literature and the "Who-called" website rates it as overwhelmingly negative. Google turned up that it for a company called Esendex.I recall several pages back that this 'Premium Number' scam was unlikely.
The banks started this over 40 years ago as part of their ‘service package’ to customers. Called credit factoring, any invoice you issued was deemed ‘paid’ (less 10-15%) and meant the money was in your account so your bottom line didn’t depend on when your customer actually paid. Of course, it was royally abused with many companies forming, billing then closing within weeks having been paid for ficticious products by bogus customers. By the time the banks tried to claw it back it was too late.Mrs L's boss (of a small company) wanted to outsource their billing in this way. The one-off incentive was that the outsourcer bought your existing debts and after that there would have been a significant % fee for every payment collected.
I'd go further than 'unlikely' and put it well and truly in the urban legend category. I cannot conceive of any way that a call from A to B can be converted into a call from B to C, unless B hangs up the original call.
They don’t even say ‘bank security’ or ‘visa security’ any more, the idea is that you think you accidentally missed the preamble. Of course if they used a bank name they’d nearly always guess wrong…A scam message left in my land line voice mail this morning was from a 0115 (Nottingham) number. It was from ‘security’ (just security) informing me of a suspicious three figure and four figure transaction from my account, and urged me to press ‘1’ or ‘2’ for their urgent attention!
They can't spell Royal Mail correctly and the url isn't the standard royalmail.com.Royalmail: Due to a missing address and incorrect postal code, your package cannot be delivered and the cost of redelivery will be bourne by you. Please click the link below to change your address and request a new delivery:
http://*******.com/bvddffda?wwM=QLrWqoOyrB
Please replace it within 12 hours to avoid unnecessary losses.
Have a nice day, Royalmail!
Well done, and don't worry, you've probably not been specifically targeted. Scammers undoubtedly routinely send these texts 'en masse' to thousands upon thousands of random numbers, knowing that a certain percentage of people could well be awaiting a real delivery. They don’t actually have any of your info (or even a package to deliver) and they only get your personal details if you're gullible enough to click through on the link(s) provided.Needless to say I haven't clicked on url, and reported as spam.
Well done, and don't worry, you've probably not been specifically targeted. Scammers undoubtedly routinely send these texts 'en masse' to thousands upon thousands of random numbers, knowing that a certain percentage of people could well be awaiting a real delivery. They don’t actually have any of your info (or even a package to deliver) and they only get your personal details if you're gullible enough to click through on the link(s) provided.
We had a scam text supposedly from Evri saying missed delivery and to respond to the email. We were at the time expecting a delivery from Evri which according to the actual Evri email as out for delivery. We didn’t reply to it but I could see why many would.….knowing that a certain percentage of people could well be awaiting a real delivery.
Many don’t understand what could be scam. Lots of people are trusting or not computer savvy. Sifting out real from fake is not always easy.and they only get your personal details if you're gullible enough to click through on the link(s) provided.
Right idea, but wrong terms (sorry, computer nerd who trains email for a living!)In the above example, the alias may look genuine but the actual email indicates it is not genuine.
I've read a few places that this is deliberate. They want people who are either too distracted or not savvy enough to notice the problems since they are also more likely not to notice that they're on a bogus payment page.I noticed the spelling mistakes and rubbish grammar straight away, then the email address it had come from.
I deleted it straight away, but at least it's a change from "I should have shared these pictures with you before..."Begin forwarded message:
just sharing my plans for January/February 2024 (link)
“Go to heaven for the climate, hell for the company.” - Mark Twain
I guess I referred to "alias" where you referred to "from header".Right idea, but wrong terms (sorry, computer nerd who trains email for a living!)
What you see in an email client is the From header, rather than alias. The From header normally consists of a display name (in this case "DVLA Electronic Vehicle Licensing") and a sender email address. Note that most email systems do no validation on the From header, which makes sender spoofing trivially easy.
I've read a few places that this is deliberate. They want people who are either too distracted or not savvy enough to notice the problems since they are also more likely not to notice that they're on a bogus payment page.
Indeed. An alias is a additional email address for a given mailbox.I guess I referred to "alias" where you referred to "from header".