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A new level of sophistication for scammers
A fan and housing is advertised over in Pelican Classifieds. I was surprised it hadn't sold so I posted I would buy it if available, seller is a long time Pelican, I recently sold him a decklid actually. So not 10-20 minutes after my posting and the seller confirming "it's yours" with a post, I got a text from an unknown number though I knew it wasn't the seller's.
The scammer's phone number is 409-422-6008 for google reference What's interesting is it is either some relatively decent AI or some guy is monitoring Classified ads on Pelican and has a database of phone numbers and probably emails too such that they can send scam texts like this one. The text was pretty good though obviously foreign both in tone and content: I'm texting you about the SC fan housing part# 930 106 101, I got your comment now, I should send you my payment details. Send me your shipping address. The 930 106 101 was in blue and underlined, I didn't click on it and have deleted and reported the text as spam. This is pretty alarming. What is even MORE alarming is the scammer texted me again after 20+ minutes of me not replying saying "Are you there?" |
Thank God most of these are off shore. The "Chingrish" and other examples of poor English are always the giveaway (we all remember the old Nigerian scams, just how funny some of them were). They are going to get better at that as well, though.
I've had many discussions with bi-lingual friends and family regarding "fluency". My own mother, born German and living here for over 60 years, still spoke "Germish". Either sentence structure, grammar, word choice, or whatever. You could always tell she "wasn't from around here", even if just reading her written word. It's a delineating factor that we just can't shake, no matter how good we are. |
Thanks for the warning, Shaun.
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Edit: and when she was giving me driving lessons when I was 15. |
I am so tired of the scams. I get several emails daily that are pure BS>. I have an old email that is 90% scams. FedEx is trying to deliver my gift. Mcafee says my antivirus has expired. Africa has a pill to make my dik bigger. On and on and on.
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We got a call the other day on the land line (yeah we still have one of them) and the caller ID said it was So Cal Edison. Figuring it might be important I answered. Turned out it was some contractor spoofing their ID and doing cold calls. We rarely answer our phone now unless we know who is calling via the ID. I don't know my cell phone # so can't give it away to people. I'm sure that cuts down on the BS calls a lot.
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This guy at 409-422-6008, just texted me referencing an item i asked about letting me know he wanted to make a deal on it. Dont even know how he got my number. Beware
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It's easy to imagine that the scammers are unsophisticated, but it seems that they are far more sophisticated than we imagine. I suspect that like anything where someone has discovered you can get paid without actually producing anything, that many/most of these are now run by organizations that are highly efficient and sophisticated and make millions every year doing various scams. |
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Lots of Amazon product descriptions are written in bad Asian English and they must know by now their product would sell better if the description was written in bad American English. But they don’t bother to hire a translator. |
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How do they get phone numbers to text to here on the forum?
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My s/o's part time employer just got an email addressing her by name and requesting that my so's direct deposit be moved to a new bank and provided routing info. Lucklily they didn't spoof the email addy, but they did use her name. Happened not long ago with settlement funds as well-they're a title company-they got email from "seller" changing routing info for several hundred k-luckily the company requires a signed form. Some very sophisticated hack.
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There is a relatively new technique called smishing - where hackers send what looks like a legitimate work related SMS (with an important/urgent topic) to your cell which has a link for you to sign in using your work credentials. It might state that a meeting has been changed and log in to get the new date/time - or even that fraudulent activity has been detected and for you to log in and change your password. Of course the link is controlled and monitored by them - so once you log in - they've just gotten access to all of your credentialed systems access.
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I received two scam txt messages back to back this morning. They must think we're idiots.
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I suspect the people that are doing this have very few options. Many years ago I worked for a time in Bangalore. I stayed in a gated area with 24/7 security. Everywhere you looked there were people and the cops were always busy.
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Thanks Shaun. This same scammer reached out to me because I responded to an ad for some wheels for sale. He wa pretending to be the seller. Gave me the same # you posted above. 409-422-6008. His email shows as Jacob Richard
I asked him to send me a photo him and the wheels, but no reply. I asked him pointed questions regarding some details I messaged him thru pelican and he didn’t have those details. At which point I knew it was a scam. |
Again, unless they have access to your PM’s how are they getting your cell phone number?
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