SQRT wrote: ↑14 Oct 2017 10:41
I never answer phone calls from numbers I don’t know.
And especially 8xx numbers.
And speaking of 8xx numbers, I do remember one time only where a legitimate company (with whom I did business with) trying to get hold of me via a 8xx number. After apparently weeks of trying, they sent me a letter on the matter. I responded to them verbally with a.... Why would you expect a customer of yours to respond to a 8xx call? and that they needed to clean up their act with a legitimate number with Caller ID on it. IOW, just what you said... I don't answer to any phone numbers I don't know.
SQRT wrote: ↑14 Oct 2017 10:41
I never answer phone calls from numbers I don’t know.
And especially 8xx numbers.
And speaking of 8xx numbers, I do remember one time only where a legitimate company (with whom I did business with) trying to get hold of me via a 8xx number. After apparently weeks of trying, they sent me a letter on the matter. I responded to them verbally with a.... Why would you expect a customer of yours to respond to a 8xx call? and that they needed to clean up their act with a legitimate number with Caller ID on it. IOW, just what you said... I don't answer to any phone numbers I don't know.
Yes, especially 8xx numbers. Like you we have probably missed a couple of legit calls. So what? Voice based phone calls are less and less important these days. Tend to be for calling family on Sundays?
And speaking of 8xx numbers, I do remember one time only where a legitimate company (with whom I did business with) trying to get hold of me via a 8xx number. After apparently weeks of trying, they sent me a letter on the matter. I responded to them verbally with a.... Why would you expect a customer of yours to respond to a 8xx call? and that they needed to clean up their act with a legitimate number with Caller ID on it. IOW, just what you said... I don't answer to any phone numbers I don't know.
Don't you have an answering machine or voice mail? Any one legitimate can leave a message.
"And the days that I keep my gratitude higher than my expectations, well, I have really good days" RW Hubbard
And speaking of 8xx numbers, I do remember one time only where a legitimate company (with whom I did business with) trying to get hold of me via a 8xx number. After apparently weeks of trying, they sent me a letter on the matter. I responded to them verbally with a.... Why would you expect a customer of yours to respond to a 8xx call? and that they needed to clean up their act with a legitimate number with Caller ID on it. IOW, just what you said... I don't answer to any phone numbers I don't know.
Don't you have an answering machine or voice mail? Any one legitimate can leave a message.
Sure. But I often don’t check those very often either. Usually just blank. Vast majority of outside communication now texts or email. Do use my phone for outgoing calls of course, but other than family, mostly to bank, insurance, or other businesses. Don’t have any land lines as these seemed mostly used for incoming marketing calls.
SQRT wrote: ↑17 Oct 2017 05:11
Sure. But I often don’t check those very often either. Usually just blank. Vast majority of outside communication now texts or email. Do use my phone for outgoing calls of course, but other than family, mostly to bank, insurance, or other businesses. Don’t have any land lines as these seemed mostly used for incoming marketing calls.
If you don't answer unless you know the party and you don't check your messages,how does someone get hold of you in an emergency? Surely you are on someone's call list as an emergency contact.
"And the days that I keep my gratitude higher than my expectations, well, I have really good days" RW Hubbard
SQRT wrote: ↑17 Oct 2017 05:11
Sure. But I often don’t check those very often either. Usually just blank. Vast majority of outside communication now texts or email. Do use my phone for outgoing calls of course, but other than family, mostly to bank, insurance, or other businesses. Don’t have any land lines as these seemed mostly used for incoming marketing calls.
If you don't answer unless you know the party and you don't check your messages,how does someone get hold of you in an emergency? Surely you are on someone's call list as an emergency contact.
Yes, I know those numbers. But they have also been instructed to use email. We travel a lot and don’t always have access to cell signals. Almost always have Internet, at least at days end.
I received a phone call yesterday from someone claiming to be from Amazon, they said there was a problem with my payment details for a recent purchase I made. I use Amazon quite a lot so I thought it might be legit although I've never heard of Amazon phoning you, they usually email. So I said to the caller that I will just log into my account and sort it out from there, to which they replied 'the order is not showing up in your account yet due to maintenance on the site'. I asked them what the product was that I ordered to which the reply was 'I can't give that information out over the phone. If you give me your updated payment details I can sort the issue out for you now'. Of course, I hung up.
The thing is, imagine how many people have recently made a purchase from Amazon? I'm willing to bet a few of them will believe the story about the order not showing up in their account and just hand over their details.
samd1 wrote: ↑18 Oct 2017 06:22
The thing is, imagine how many people have recently made a purchase from Amazon? I'm willing to bet a few of them will believe the story about the order not showing up in their account and just hand over their details.
If people still fall for those kind of phishing attempts after a decade or more of daily stories on same, they have been asleep at the wheel. Really.....
SkaSka wrote: ↑18 Oct 2017 12:48
I actually received (a legitimate, I think) call from Amazon a couple of weeks ago.
I had placed an order for ~$2,000 camera and they called me to verify that I had made the purchase.
Of course, I was initially suspicious but when they quoted the dollar amount and the camera brand and model number, it slightly eased my concerns.
After they verified, that I had made the purchase, that was it and the call was over.
Still thought it was a bit strange.
As long as all you said was "yes" then I wouldn't worry about it. If you made the mistake of telling them anything that you would not have told a stranger on the bus then I would be cancelling your credit card before you reply to this post.
No information like credit card or address was given during the phone call.
After sleuthing around, it does appear that it probably is a scam call.
I haven't noticed any abnormal activity on my credit card or on my Amazon accounts, but will be keeping a sharper look on those 2 for the next little while.
I agree. Never respond affirmative on anything to an unsolicited call. I would have told the caller those exact words and then say you will respond in your normal way through your own secure online links (a real call would not be offended by that caution).
SkaSka wrote: ↑19 Oct 2017 00:18
No information like credit card or address was given during the phone call.
After sleuthing around, it does appear that it probably is a scam call.
I haven't noticed any abnormal activity on my credit card or on my Amazon accounts, but will be keeping a sharper look on those 2 for the next little while.
I would suggest you change your Amazon Password.
"And the days that I keep my gratitude higher than my expectations, well, I have really good days" RW Hubbard
Normal people… believe that if it ain’t broke, don’t fix it. Engineers believe that if it ain’t broke, it doesn’t have enough features yet. – Scott Adams
I received a phone call at my home number. I believe it was a taped message. There was a pause at the beginning and when I spoke to it at the end, there was no response from the speaker (just a click followed by nothing). He had a non-canadian accent and claimed he represented a recovering agency mandated by CRA to recover unpaid taxes and that I was to call a phone number (that he repeated twice but that I did not note except that the area code was 289 (I googles it and it is a "overlay" area code in the Toronto-Hamilton area)).
He claimed that if I did not initiate proceedings, there would be a lean placed on my assets.
I am convinced that I owe nothing to CRA.
Has anbody experienced this? I am quite sure it is a scam.
StuBee
"The term is over: the holidays have begun. The dream is ended: this is the morning."-C.S.Lewis, The Last Battle
StuBee wrote: ↑19 Dec 2017 16:15
I just had an unpleasant experience.
I received a phone call at my home number. I believe it was a taped message. There was a pause at the beginning and when I spoke to it at the end, there was no response from the speaker (just a click followed by nothing). He had a non-canadian accent and claimed he represented a recovering agency mandated by CRA to recover unpaid taxes and that I was to call a phone number (that he repeated twice but that I did not note except that the area code was 289 (I googles it and it is a "overlay" area code in the Toronto-Hamilton area)).
He claimed that if I did not initiate proceedings, there would be a lean placed on my assets.
I am convinced that I owe nothing to CRA.
Has anbody experienced this? I am quite sure it is a scam.
StuBee
On my cell number, which I do not provide to CRA, I got a taped message from "John at CRA" who, without mentioning my name at all, said that there was a suit filed against me, and an arrest warrant issued in my name. At the end, there was a request to call a number in the 647 area code (that's an overlay of the main 416 Toronto area code).
The call was repeated several times during the day.
finiki, the Canadian financial wiki
“It doesn't matter how beautiful your theory is, it doesn't matter how smart you are. If it doesn't agree with experiment, it's wrong.” [Richard P. Feynman, Nobel prize winner]
There are a few reasons why this is unlikely to be a legitimate request from CRA (or an agency mandated by CRA). First of all they did not even verify who I was nor did they mention that they wanted to speak to me (or any other tax payer in my household and associated with this number). In other words, they have no way of knowing they even spoke to the right person.
Also, it would be extremely odd that CRA would go straight to a recovering agency without trying at least once (if not several times) to have me pay overdue amounts by a more traditional way.
"The term is over: the holidays have begun. The dream is ended: this is the morning."-C.S.Lewis, The Last Battle