GreatLakes
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Aug 6, 2015
- Messages
- 5,544
I got a VERY weird one that I’ve never heard of before on Wednesday. It was actually a phone call to my cell and I answered it because it’s my work phone. It was an automated voice saying it was from Amazon and if I wanted to authorize a $399 charge for Amazon Prime I should hang up now. If I did not want to authorize it I needed to press #1. When I pressed #1 the call automatically hung up.
Now I’m not sure how big a threat this actually is but since my DH does have a credit card attached to his Prime account for auto-check out, it spooked me. Especially since 99.9% of the time I would have just hung up the second I heard the robo-voice. I also checked my own Amazon account profile and found that it did not have my cell number listed as the contact (I never use it as my primary contact on forms of any kind). I have used it as the contact for placing orders though which makes me think none of our on-line transactions are at all secure.
These spam messages and the actual transactions are not necessarily related. Anyone can buy a list of phone numbers and blast out text messages to them. As more and more breaches happen that include phone numbers the numbers are out there. It doesn't mean they actually got them from the vendor.
It is also possible to generate a script that calls or texts all 1,000 possibilities in known legitimate area code + carrier code combinations meaning they are just casting a wide net. If your phone number is 470-845-6471 a bad actor could have easily programmed a dialer to call 470-845-0000 through 470-845-9999 and capture all of the responses that confirm your number is a valid number for future use. This is the most likely scenario for what happened to you. Someone programmed a dialer to make calls to some large set of numbers and anyone that presses 1 gets moved to the known good number list.
Now I’m not sure how big a threat this actually is but since my DH does have a credit card attached to his Prime account for auto-check out, it spooked me. Especially since 99.9% of the time I would have just hung up the second I heard the robo-voice. I also checked my own Amazon account profile and found that it did not have my cell number listed as the contact (I never use it as my primary contact on forms of any kind). I have used it as the contact for placing orders though which makes me think none of our on-line transactions are at all secure.
It's not just a phone number - it's our phone number.
I'm more of an ignore or "no thank you" kind of person.