PozBearWI Posted Monday at 04:09 PM Report Posted Monday at 04:09 PM I've experienced that as well @ellentonboy. But I hadn't previously blocked the idiot. My suite of security software was ahead of it for me. I wouldn't even have known except I periodically go in and empty spam, and scroll through the list to make sure there are no unintentional items in spam. Note though, just because it appears to be "from" a known person, there is a reason my software put it in spam. So I use care to see whether that really came from my buddy Ron; or someone pretending to be him. 1 Quote
PozBearWI Posted Monday at 04:11 PM Report Posted Monday at 04:11 PM The other thing that started a couple weeks back are phone calls from a friendly sounding lady telling me about my back taxes.... Had I owed back taxes I would of course have already known from a letter from the IRS. Each call gets noted as a spam call blocking further calls from that number. But sure as shit a few hours or a day later the exact same voice is calling me about my purportedly back taxes from a different number. So far in the last month there have been at least 50 of these.... Quote
sluttony Posted Tuesday at 08:58 AM Report Posted Tuesday at 08:58 AM 17 hours ago, ellentonboy said: It's ironic to me that this post telling us to be careful was the first thing I read this morning when I logged on. Over the weekend I received an email from a guy demanding $1700 and that it needed to be deposited into some kind of crypto currency account. He actually started off with "Hello Pervert" and said he had video of me jerking off to "questionable" pornography. He said he had access to all my contacts and would send out videos of me, and that I better not go to the "coppers" (that was his word, not mine) or else he would know and all my information would be released. He gave me the name of where to send it, along with an account number that had to be 50 digits long. You can't respond, or reply. Funny thing is, the email went to my junk file and it had a red "blocked" icon next to it, so obviously he had tried this with me before. I wanted to tell him he was welcome to send out any fake videos he has of me, I don't turn on web cams and jack off to kiddie porn or anything like that. He said I made my error by clicking on a link and he was able to send a virus through my computer and attach it to my phones and all my other devices. I highly doubt this. Has anyone else experienced this lately? I get the impression, just by the way he worded his email and certain icons he used, that the threat came from Europe or outside the US. I really am not concerned, but it did come to my main email address that contains my legal name, that was the only thing that alarmed me. Anyone have a similar experience as of late? This is such an old scare tactic now. The more clever ones also have a password associated with your email account and whether or not it's the one for your computer/email etc or not isn't the point - it's designed to scare people into believing that the extortionist has somehow gained access to your computer. Which is never the case. There is not even any point responding because all that does is shows them that that particular email is indeed alive and in use. Just block, ignore and walk away. 1 Quote
sluttony Posted Tuesday at 09:02 AM Report Posted Tuesday at 09:02 AM 16 hours ago, PozBearWI said: The other thing that started a couple weeks back are phone calls from a friendly sounding lady telling me about my back taxes.... Had I owed back taxes I would of course have already known from a letter from the IRS. Each call gets noted as a spam call blocking further calls from that number. But sure as shit a few hours or a day later the exact same voice is calling me about my purportedly back taxes from a different number. So far in the last month there have been at least 50 of these.... These are quite common in the UK as well though usually for things like cavity wall insulation and/or solar panels. Sometimes pretending to be from banks etc but rarely the tax man. It's more difficult for them now than it used to be. The common tactic was to steal a purse or a wallet with cards in, ideally with some kind of ID then track down a phone number. It used to be fairly easy to mask a phone number on SIP providers to make it look like the call was coming from the victims actual bank. The scammers would even then say "but hey, don't take my word for it... call us back on your banks number from a bank statement" because it used to be that you needed a CPC signal to the exchange - Calling Party Cleared... i.e. the call only dropped if the person who made the outgoing call hung up, not the called party. The scammers then popped you on silent hold, waited until they heard numbers being dialled and pretended to be the bank again. Both number masking and CPC were stopped some time ago so that it's much more difficult for that kind of bullshit now but they still try. 1 Quote
Shotsfired Posted Tuesday at 11:49 AM Report Posted Tuesday at 11:49 AM So here's the thing. At some point a group of hackers broke into a website and stole a bunch of information like passwords, login info excetera They are usually from Russia, but can be from any where. They then sell that information on the dark web to scammers. Chances are he didn't have everything he claimed to have. Its like those phone calls where they pretend to be government agents who want to arrest you. They are looking for easy targets. They aren't going to waste their time on following thru. They probably have a hefty list of potential victims. Tell them to fuck off. 1 Quote
Shotsfired Posted Tuesday at 12:10 PM Report Posted Tuesday at 12:10 PM Basically, its like muggers. They aren't going to mess with the big guy who is aware off his surroundings and confident. They are going to target the drunk guy who is tiny and not paying attentions, especially if the guy doesn't present ss confident. They want the easy mark. People actually often have a hand in their own victimization. The gay kids in high school who didn't act like being gay was a big deal where left alone and often popular even if they were open. The kids who had a chip on their shoulder, felt less than, and complained to the teachers where bullied. Sometimes ruthlessly. Often I would step in to help break something up. I told one kid to stop apologizing for who he is and just own it. He had nothing to feel ashamed or apologize for. We hung out for a while until he figured out how not to participate in the cycle of abuse. The same with these blackmaillers. They can tell by the way you react if they are going to get anything. If they aren't they move on. 2 Quote
gimpsub69 Posted Tuesday at 05:37 PM Report Posted Tuesday at 05:37 PM 5 hours ago, Shotsfired said: Basically, its like muggers. They aren't going to mess with the big guy who is aware off his surroundings and confident. They are going to target the drunk guy who is tiny and not paying attentions, especially if the guy doesn't present ss confident. They want the easy mark. People actually often have a hand in their own victimization. The gay kids in high school who didn't act like being gay was a big deal where left alone and often popular even if they were open. The kids who had a chip on their shoulder, felt less than, and complained to the teachers where bullied. Sometimes ruthlessly. Often I would step in to help break something up. I told one kid to stop apologizing for who he is and just own it. He had nothing to feel ashamed or apologize for. We hung out for a while until he figured out how not to participate in the cycle of abuse. The same with these blackmaillers. They can tell by the way you react if they are going to get anything. If they aren't they move on. I love when someone threatens to express me by blackmail. I just share where I can be found on Google search and they aren't going to do anything worse. They block me immediately Quote
ellentonboy Posted Tuesday at 07:42 PM Report Posted Tuesday at 07:42 PM On 12/2/2024 at 11:11 AM, PozBearWI said: The other thing that started a couple weeks back are phone calls from a friendly sounding lady telling me about my back taxes.... Had I owed back taxes I would of course have already known from a letter from the IRS. Each call gets noted as a spam call blocking further calls from that number. But sure as shit a few hours or a day later the exact same voice is calling me about my purportedly back taxes from a different number. So far in the last month there have been at least 50 of these.... You are right regarding the IRS, and I hope more posters will understand that. I had worked for the Internal Revenue Service after I got out of college. One of the first things they taught us once employed was that, in almost any situation, they NEVER call individuals who owe taxes. They will continually send letters, then certified letters, and then they start garnishment procedures. Once that begins, taxpayers can open a telephone dialogue with an agent who is about to take their possessions from them (i.e. their cars, homes, big ticket items). But for someone who may not have filed, or know they owe back taxes, you won't get some random call from a polite individual who claims they work for the IRS, who offers to help you satisfy your back tax situation. It just doesn't work that way. I am glad you mentioned this because I do know of individuals who have been approached in this manner and these people are basically criminals. 1 Quote
TaKinGDeePanal Posted Tuesday at 08:51 PM Report Posted Tuesday at 08:51 PM On 12/3/2024 at 2:03 AM, ellentonboy said: It's ironic to me that this post telling us to be careful was the first thing I read this morning when I logged on. Over the weekend I received an email from a guy demanding $1700 and that it needed to be deposited into some kind of crypto currency account. He actually started off with "Hello Pervert" and said he had video of me jerking off to "questionable" pornography. He said he had access to all my contacts and would send out videos of me, and that I better not go to the "coppers" (that was his word, not mine) or else he would know and all my information would be released. He gave me the name of where to send it, along with an account number that had to be 50 digits long. You can't respond, or reply. Funny thing is, the email went to my junk file and it had a red "blocked" icon next to it, so obviously he had tried this with me before. I wanted to tell him he was welcome to send out any fake videos he has of me, I don't turn on web cams and jack off to kiddie porn or anything like that. He said I made my error by clicking on a link and he was able to send a virus through my computer and attach it to my phones and all my other devices. I highly doubt this. Has anyone else experienced this lately? I get the impression, just by the way he worded his email and certain icons he used, that the threat came from Europe or outside the US. I really am not concerned, but it did come to my main email address that contains my legal name, that was the only thing that alarmed me. Anyone have a similar experience as of late? I got pretty much exactly the same one a couple of months ago. Was told that if I googled him that it would send an automatic alert to him and that he’d release everything he had. Idiot doesn’t know that I don’t click on links that are sent to me in emails unless I know the sender. I ended up deleting it - and (I think) blocking the address. Nothing heard from him since. I only every email offer people from this site who I haven’t met through protonmail. Quote
hntnhole Posted 6 hours ago Report Posted 6 hours ago Another thing that can help when (using the laptop) is using a VPN. I've used one of those for years - and anyone who get's ahold of an email address thinks I live a thousand miles away. Some of them (the VPN's) are free. One time though, some jerk figured it out, so I gave him the address (a thousand miles away) of a vacant lot. Had one of my friends back there find a vacant lot, figure out what the address* would be, and that took care of it. What I wonder though, is how many telephone numbers can we block? I get phone calls all day long from charities trying to raise money, some of which I respond to, most of which I don't. There must be a couple hundred numbers on the phone by now that I've blocked ... *not a difficult thing to do - all the addresses were 4 numbers away (plus or minus) by the city lot. One more thing; BZ is a public forum, so if the winners of the election come looking for folks to bother ...... well ....... Quote
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