A Truth? On Facebook? It must have escaped from the zoo!

Just to show you that not everything on social media is rubbish and that it can be used for the purposes of good not evil here is a warning about a confirmed bona fide phone scam.

This scam first appeared in about 2009 and you can read the post below. It popped up on BT’s Website as well as Virgin Media (the two providers featured in this version) and has lots of credible sources (Hoax-Slayer, BBC, The Register) from 2009. Are they still running the scam? Hard to say, the Facebook post that we saw today still says “new telephone scam” despite it starting in ’09  but it has happened before so we’re still calling this TRUE!

Subject: BT phone scam

PLEASE PASS ON TO YOUR FRIENDS & FAMILY.

The new telephone ‘scam’ has arrived.

I received a call from a ‘representative’ of BT, informing me that he was disconnecting me because of an unpaid bill. He demanded payment immediately of £31.00, or it would be £118.00 to re-connect at a later date.

The guy wasn’t even fazed when I told him I was with Virgin Media, allegedly VM have to pay BT a percentage for line rental!

I asked the guy’s name – the very ‘English’ John Peacock with a very ‘African’ accent – & phone number – 0800 0800 152.

Obviously the fella realized I wasn’t believing his story, so offered to demonstrate that he was from BT. I asked how & he told me to hang up & try phoning someone – he would disconnect my phone to prevent this.

AND HE DID!!
My phone was dead – no engaged tone, nothing – until he phoned me again.

Very pleased with himself, he asked if that was enough proof that he was with BT. I asked how the payment was to be made & he said credit card, there & then.

I said that I didn’t know how he’d done it, but I had absolutely no intention of paying him, I didn’t believe his name or that he worked for BT.

He hung up.
Did 1471 & phoned his fictitious 0800 number – not recognised.

I phoned the police to let them know, I wasn’t the first! It’s only just started apparently but it is escalating.

Their advice was to let as many people know by word of mouth of this scam. The fact that the phone does go off would probably convince some people it’s real, so please let as many friends & family aware of this.

This is good but not that clever. He gave the wrong number – it should have been 0800 800152 which takes you through to BT Business. The cutting off of the line is very simple , he stays on the line with the mute button on and you can’t dial out – but he can hear you trying. (This is because the person who initiates a call is the one to terminate it). When you stop trying he cuts off and immediately calls back. You could almost be convinced! The sad thing is that it is so simple that it will certainly fool the elderly and vulnerable. Obviously, if this scam is real, once they have your credit/debit card details, there is nothing to stop them cleaning out your account.

Dick’s Tip – Top 5 Facebook Scams

  1. FB_profile_imgProfile Viewers and Profile Blockers - You’ve all seen them. “Who’s been looking at your profile?” “See who’s blocked you from seeing their profile.” NONE of these apps work. App developers aren’t given access to the data required to create them.
  2. Free Anything – If it sounds too good to be true, then you can be sure that it is on Facebook! You aren’t going to get free stuff just by completing a survey and you sure aren’t getting to keep that iPhone, iPad or PS4 after you’re done testing it. (There is no test – hence no iPhone/iPad/PS4!)
  3. Phishing Attempts to Steal Your Login Info – NEVER give out your login details in Facebook, regardless of what you are threatened with. Messages pretending to be from Facebook Security who are about to close your account for one reason or another is a popular way they trick users.
  4. New or Extra Facebook Features - Again, you’d have to have been living under a rock to not see one of these scams running round FB. Offering dislike buttons, apps to change your Facebook colour or see who unfriended you are just a few examples of these scams. There are legitimate browser extensions that can offer these features, but they often come with an unwanted piece of adware or malware added into the plugins. We recommend that you don’t install them at all, but if you really hate Facebook blue that much only install apps and extensions from trusted, well-known developers.
  5. Fake Celebrity Stories – Particularly shocking or sexy ones. Facebook is not the place to receive your celebrity news and gossip! Scammers use fake deaths and other sensational stories to entice users. These often spread very fast, because users share the posts before verifying the story. Rule of thumb, if it starts with “SHOCKING, OMG you’ll never believe it!” You really shouldn’t believe it.