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'Microsoft' Scam Callers Arrested After Years of Terrorising the Technically Challenged (gizmodo.co.uk)

An anonymous reader shares a report: Those shameless scammers that cold-call people pretending to be from Microsoft and demanding money after walking users through supposed problems with their computers? They're going down, it seems, with four people arrested in the UK for enabling the rip-off. City of London Police and Microsoft, the real Microsoft, have been working together for two years to trace the operators of the scheme, with the four people -- two from Woking and two from South Shields -- arrested on suspicion of fraud. Although the calls were found to originate from India, the investigators found that the scam was allegedly being run out of the UK, with the poor overseas callers working from scripts and, presumably, not really aware they're doing anything hugely wrong.

9 of 185 comments (clear)

  1. Of course the callers were aware by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    They'll lie their asses off when they call. Of course the poor overseas callers were fully aware it was a scam.

    1. Re:Of course the callers were aware by mbadolato · · Score: 4, Informative

      Oh ok is that why when I'd mess around with them pretending I was looking at my computer they would immediately call me a motherfucker that was wasting their time and hang up?

  2. Best way to deal with these scams by mwvdlee · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The first few times I tried talking to them, then I tried calling them liars.
    But I found the best way to deal with them was to just say nothing and mute the phone; it wastes their time, but not mine.

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  3. Not the only ones by spaceman375 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The business model has proven itself lucrative. Do you really think they're the only scammers in this global town? The shakedowns aren't limited to windows users; they use IRS and tax collection scams most often, but any possible billing is fair game to scammers. They prey on old people, immigrants, and minorities just because they are more vulnerable.

    At least two other "organizations" are already running this fake microsoft scam. It's just another revenue stream to them.

    --
    On the one hand you take life too seriously, and on the other, you do not take playful existence seriously enough. Seth
  4. Re:Queue by Hognoxious · · Score: 4, Insightful

    You could argue that the moon is made of cheese, but you'd be wrong about that too.

    --
    Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
  5. Be careful; they might combine their scams by knorthern+knight · · Score: 4, Funny

    Hello; this is Rachel at Tax Services. We understand that you got a free upgrade to Windows 10. Because it was free, there is a gift tax payment outstanding. Either you or your attorney must call us immediately at 1-800-xxx-xxxx to settle this outstanding bill or else you will face immediate arrest. We only accept payment in Itunes cards.

    --

    I'm not repeating myself
    I'm an X window user; I'm an ex-Windows user
  6. Re:Fun Game by slide-rule · · Score: 4, Informative

    My favorite encounter (on behalf of the M.I.L. whose phone they called) was about 45 minutes. The pattern from previous calls is they want you to type "(win)+R" to then launch event viewer, because OMG all the errors they'll show you.

    So I stymied them for over five minutes when I explained my keyboard didn't have that little windows key on it.
    Oh, yes, I know what it looks like, my neighbor's PC has one, but I don't.

    Then after some mention of "this thing is awfully slow, I'll have to restart it" (setting the phone down) was more minutes of his life gone. Then accidentally hung up half way through a sentence. They actually called back. Then allegedly the kid was having a meltdown, very sorry sir I have to check, but I'll be right back, and I do want these problems taken care of. Et cetera.

    The jig was up after I "tried" to download their remote control software, but my (IE, allegedly) said site could not be found. (I was instead googling the error message to simulate a 'dialup modem not connected' scenario that they'd have to walk me through. You know, stay a step ahead.)

    Finally Dave's "manager" cursed at me and said that I had ample time to get this to work and that I was wasting their time. A realization that was honestly 30 minutes too late. (Oh, no calls since.)

  7. Easy way to stop this sort of scam by buss_error · · Score: 4, Interesting

    There is a fairly easy way to stop all kinds of scams like this.

    Issue "Fraud cards" to LEO.

    What, might you ask, is a fraud card? It's a special card that will stop a merchant account. Shut it down. Scammer calls a undercover LEO or their call is forwarded to them, LEO gives them the number, and as soon as it hits the card processor, it locks the merchant account and triggers a fraud investigation into that merchant account.

    Full stop.

    As for checking, that would be a tiny bit harder but not insurmountably so. Bit coin I doubt much could be done about it since the point of crypto currency is to avoid LE as much as possible.

    --
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  8. Re: Fun Game by Dutch+Gun · · Score: 4, Insightful

    You wasted 30 minutes of your life on this? Let's never mind the fact that it's your *life* you wasted and look at from an economic standpoint. You make how much per hour? Indian in call center makes how much per hour? I don't see how you are winning.

    I'm guessing he counted that in his "entertainment" time allotment.

    In any case, I'd prefer to call this a "public service" rather than a "waste of time". Those 45 minutes he forced them to spend was 45 minutes they could NOT spend scamming some other poor soul who might be genuinely bamboozled by these scum.

    --
    Irony: Agile development has too much intertia to be abandoned now.