Scammers and smartphones
Posted: Fri Jun 14, 2024 12:20 pm
I have a smartphone that I hardly use (otherwise relying on my old non-internet Nokia and landlines). I've shared the smartphone number out of necessity with only two places: my bank and a company that does blood tests. Recently, I received two identical scam text messages from different senders saying I had a parcel that couldn't be delivered because the address was incomplete and asking me to go to a link and complete my postal address. So I deleted and reported them.
What I'm wondering is how the scammers got the number. Does it mean that a place you've shared the number with is insecure, or do the scammers have some kind of system that generates random numbers?
I recently came across this interview with a guy in the UK who'd been contacted (on his smartphone) by scammers posing as the fraud department of his bank. Part of why he'd been drawn in by them and thought they were who they said they were (losing 50,000 pounds, which the bank later reimbursed) was that they were able to tell him exactly how much money he had in his account and give him an accurate rundown of his recent ATM withdrawals. How could they have known that?
Adam Rickitt opens up on being scammed out of £50,000 in bank fraud
What I'm wondering is how the scammers got the number. Does it mean that a place you've shared the number with is insecure, or do the scammers have some kind of system that generates random numbers?
I recently came across this interview with a guy in the UK who'd been contacted (on his smartphone) by scammers posing as the fraud department of his bank. Part of why he'd been drawn in by them and thought they were who they said they were (losing 50,000 pounds, which the bank later reimbursed) was that they were able to tell him exactly how much money he had in his account and give him an accurate rundown of his recent ATM withdrawals. How could they have known that?
Adam Rickitt opens up on being scammed out of £50,000 in bank fraud