EvanK
Member
I had the day off today, and was sitting at home peacefully when I got a phone call.
I picked up, and the man on the other line had a strong Indian accent. My first reaction was that it was from a call centre, and I was getting ready to hang up when he told me that "there was a problem with my computer". This caught my interest.
He told me to go to my desktop. I said I was there. He told me to open up "Computer", and I said that I couldn't find it. He said "click on the start button". I made the illusion that I was using a Mac or Windows 8, and I couldn't find it. He called me a liar and said that I wasn't at the computer, so I quickly pulled out my iPad.
He gave me a website, and I accessed it thinking that it wouldn't give an iOS device a virus. Anyways, when I got to the website, he spent about 10 or 15 minutes giving me directions to install this software. I said that I couldn't, and eventually mentioned that I was using an iPad. He got angry and told me to log onto my desktop, which I then said was broken. He said he could fix it, and I told him "okay, the send me a new motherboard to my house for me to install. I've been thinking of putting an ASRock Extreme4 into my new build". He told me sarcastically that he'd come to my house to fix it the next day, and I finished the conversation by saying "just stop calling, and stop trying to scam people into getting access to their PCs and making them think at there's a problem". The call was interrupted by static, and he hung up.
I'm sure you all are smart enough to know NOT to install anything this guy wants you to, but just for the reference, as opposed to just hanging up when someone calls trying to get you to install "Teamviewer", as opposed to just hanging up, keep them on the line for a bit and have some fun.
Anyone have similar experiences?
I picked up, and the man on the other line had a strong Indian accent. My first reaction was that it was from a call centre, and I was getting ready to hang up when he told me that "there was a problem with my computer". This caught my interest.
He told me to go to my desktop. I said I was there. He told me to open up "Computer", and I said that I couldn't find it. He said "click on the start button". I made the illusion that I was using a Mac or Windows 8, and I couldn't find it. He called me a liar and said that I wasn't at the computer, so I quickly pulled out my iPad.
He gave me a website, and I accessed it thinking that it wouldn't give an iOS device a virus. Anyways, when I got to the website, he spent about 10 or 15 minutes giving me directions to install this software. I said that I couldn't, and eventually mentioned that I was using an iPad. He got angry and told me to log onto my desktop, which I then said was broken. He said he could fix it, and I told him "okay, the send me a new motherboard to my house for me to install. I've been thinking of putting an ASRock Extreme4 into my new build". He told me sarcastically that he'd come to my house to fix it the next day, and I finished the conversation by saying "just stop calling, and stop trying to scam people into getting access to their PCs and making them think at there's a problem". The call was interrupted by static, and he hung up.
I'm sure you all are smart enough to know NOT to install anything this guy wants you to, but just for the reference, as opposed to just hanging up when someone calls trying to get you to install "Teamviewer", as opposed to just hanging up, keep them on the line for a bit and have some fun.
Anyone have similar experiences?