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Area code: | 312 |
Prefix: | 529 |
Country: | United States |
State: | Illinois |
City: | Chicago |
Company: | AT&T Local |
Usage: | Landline |
Time zone: | Central |
Leave a comment about 3125299717:
Called @ 8PM..had my name and said they were conducting a survey on my recent hospital stay for Medicare. (no hospital stay) I politely told him that I do not participate in surveys and he started yelling at me @ how they needed my input, etc. and that I might have gotten a survey in the mail...Yelling? that works. I yelled back at him "don't yell at me thank you" and hung up. The company is A BT SBRI INC per my caller id. How he got my name and phone # number I have no idea but we're 1500 miles apart. A survey? I don't do surveys on the phone. Who are they? Who is he? and I am gonna share personal info with him...yeh right
I get two to three calls a day from this number. 312-529-9717. If I answer the line goes dead. When I call back I get "Thank you for calling APTIS RBI, if you'd like to blah blah blah. then it goes to a message that the voicemail box is full and hangs up.Sometimes when I have a little time to call I dial the number several times in a row and hang up.Maybe if a few hundred people started doing that everyday we could overload their system and they couldn't call out?I don't know much about the inner workings of auto dialers, so I'm not sure if that would have any effect on them.
Constantly calls our cell number, usually at night after dinner. Wish the Congress would put real teeth in the DNC Listviolations.
A woman named "Jovan" (jah-vahn) called me claiming to be working for Harvard. She said she wanted to ask me questions for a survey. The survey was supposedly being conducted by Ed Labs, and it's allegedly called the Understanding and Equality Survey. She gave me several phone numbers and websites that seem dubious but are apparently linked with Harvard that would prove her affiliation. When I pressed her further she claimed she didn't know much, was "just doing her job" and that my number was "randomly generated in a computer". I'm leaving some stuff out but all in all it was sketchy and I can't imagine that Harvard hires third party people to call randomly generated numbers that aren't EVEN in the same state as Harvard itself (and Jovan claimed she didn't know what my zip code was or what state I'm in. like, you don't know what the first 3 numbers of my 10 digit phone number was?) Why does someone employed by an Ivy League School not know, already, where I'm from. Why are they relying on randomly generated numbers? Why are all the phone numbers she gave me kind of bogus? Answer: It's a scam. They want you to say where you are from, how old you are, answer in the form of yes and no, and eventually reveal your name so that they can steal your identity. All of those details can be used to find your bank. Recordings of your voice can be used to affect your account over the phone without you being privy to it. This number is pure scam.
Told me their taking a survey for the CDC. The lady said it will be 20 min worth of some vary personal questions and that I should be alone by myself when I answer them. I'm thinking "WTF"! I just hung up and put a block on that number.