Read comments about 330-836-7919
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Area code: | 330 |
Prefix: | 836 |
Country: | United States |
State: | Ohio |
City: | Akron |
Company: | Ameritech Ohio |
Usage: | Landline |
Time zone: | Eastern |
Leave a comment about 3308367919:
Just received a call from Amy Murphy. Told her that I worked for Microsoft and we do not have any person called Amy working forMicrosoft. I told her I was going to report her to the authorities - she hung up quickly.
Apparently Amy Murphy decided to stop giving her name to CID. I got a call from this number and all CID said was "Akron, Ohio". It rang 4 times and then disconnected. I never answer calls from people I don't know, locations I know I don't have friends in, or numbers that are unfamiliar to me. I would NEVER call a number back. Many of these scammers know that elderly people frequently live alone and are anxious to talk to another human being. Never cooperate with these callers. No matter how inconvenient they are, train yourself to ignore these calls. It's better to be lonely than to be scammed.
2 calls in a row.., yep, Amy Murphy. I don't know any Amy Murphy. First call, the answering machine picked up and they hung up. "Amy" called back immediately. Must be "really" important. In very broken English..."hello, I'm calling about your computer" I just pushed the call block button. Wow! My computer is running amazingly well considering "Microscoft" (not) has been calling me from all sorts of phone numbers over the last 5 years! It must be one hell of a good-working computer. And it seems they have very dedicated Microsoft employees, okay scammers, to keep trying to contact me to save me from whatever bad stuff is out there. I still cannot believe that some people still believe that the DCL applies to this sort of scam. The DCL is only for legitimate businesses. Scammers are not legit but are trying to sound that way. But if you really want to mess with them, try this. In the move Excalibur there was an Old Celtic "charm of making" that sounds really spooky. Look it up on Google. Just try reciting that to them and nothing else. That sounds scare the pants off of them.
Yeah this number is a scam 100% ! They have been calling my house almost every day in the last week or so telling me something is wrong with my PC and that I have a virus. I built my system and have 100% knowledge on what is on my system and do daily maintenance on it so I know its nothing on my PC. When I asked who this was and what they wanted, being he was speaking in a Indian accent and when I told him I couldn't hear him being their was so much background noise he said in a clear English voice " F$%K You " and he hung up . Block this number and report these [***] !!
Sorry - you're not correct. You keep referring to 'the government' and allege that they're actively involved in scams and making money off phone number lists. That's not the way it works. The FCC is in charge of regulating communications. They establish the rules for carriers (those people who 'own' the blocks of phone numbers). They set the business parameters for the carriers operations. Period. What the carriers do next is where we start to see the phony phone numbers. Scammers can create a 'carrier' profile with the FCC and undergo a review to establish them as a real business. That's the easy part. Next, the scammer carrier can subdivide the blocks of phone numbers and use some of them for legitimate businesses. They also make blocks available for other scammers to use. The saga of 'Pacific Telecommunications' is an example in point for this. Since the numbers the scammers use are part of a legitimate block, they're not thrown out by audit software the carriers use to scan traffic.The use of Caller ID causes us headaches. A scammer can spoof the Caller ID to whatever they want using software they buy for their robodialers from places like 'CallerID4U' - another shady operation that sells stuff to scammers. The reason for doing this is to allow a scammer to collect a small fee, called a 'dip fee' for every call made - whether you answer or not. The 'dip fee' is a big source of income for them.The FCC created the DNC lists and as Slim says below, they charge legitimate businesses a fee for its use. And there are both monetary and legal penalties that the FCC assesses if the business violates the rules. You suggest there aren't and you're wrong. If I recall correctly, the FCC levied fines totaling over $35million in 2014 and shut down about two dozen businesses that violated the DNC. The issue we have is with those who don't follow the rules, right?
Poor Amy Murphy had her number cloned obviously. Just got a call from her number. I just blocked it.
Received a call earlier today. Did not recognize caller and did not answer. Must not have been that important as no msg was left. Looks like a return to mumbo-jumbo on caller id - V12140611440062
The caller said he was calling because there was a lot of issues with my computer. Number listed as Amy Murphy but a man with a foreign accent is the one calling