When I was a telecom manager, I bought a new bank of DID numbers for my
company. I assigned the lead number of the bank of numbers to the phone
in my switch room, and as soon as I saved the change, it rang.
I picked it up, and it was a wrong number for a museum. Thinking about
it, It seemed likely that a museum patron would have an old number
written down somewhere instead of looking it up. :)
I'm getting SPAM calls from "Google Voice Verification". They keep
asking for the "business owner". Not sure what they want to charge for,
but when I ask them to take me off of their list, they double down with
what great value they offer - or once, told me it wasn't his job to
take me off of their list and I "need a secretary".
I've got around 60 calls logged, am considering taking them to court.
Attempting a "reply" from one echo to a new echo with Slypheed. Hope
this works.
On Sat, 6 Jan 2024 07:50:00 -0800^^^^^^^^^^^
Kurt Weiske <0@700.218.1> wrote:
From: Wilfred van Velzen <0@464.280.2>..
To: August Abolins
Newsgroups: chat
On Sat, 6 Jan 2024 07:50:00 -0800^^^^^^^^^^^
Kurt Weiske <0@700.218.1> wrote:
That is curious!?
August Abolins wrote to Kurt Weiske <=-
The whole thing sounds bogus. A caller with a sincere intention would
not start taking a defensive attitude like that. Can't you just block those incoming calls?
..Can't you just block
those incoming calls?
No, part of the problem with VOIP is it's easy to change
your CPNI. The calls come from different numbers each
time. They just show up as the city (usually near me) and
a number.
Sysop: | Angel Ripoll |
---|---|
Location: | Madrid, Spain |
Users: | 11 |
Nodes: | 8 (0 / 8) |
Uptime: | 38:47:40 |
Calls: | 479 |
Files: | 14,070 |
Messages: | 62,307 |