Next time you get a call, waste their time a little pretending to be slow and then do something to make them angry such as explain that you've been wasting their time and don't approve of their business methods. They'll put you on some uber-mark list as retaliation, and you'll get a couple of dozen calls over the next few days.
>get a couple of dozen calls over the next few days.
For me, it's been years. I've irritated a lot of scammers. I've also a fake bd of 01/23/45 for most of my online life so I fit right into their target group.
> Next time you get a call, waste their time a little pretending to be slow and then do something to make them angry such as explain that you've been wasting their time and don't approve of their business methods. They'll put you on some uber-mark list as retaliation, and you'll get a couple of dozen calls over the next few days.
Iunno, I do this every time and they usually hang up on me quickly.
If they uber-marked me, they'll just waste even more time. But alas it hasn't happened.
It is very low effort to just put the phone down and waste their time until they realise. They are usually so deep into their script that they will talk for minutes.
I was on my way out the door one morning, taking my dog to the vet to have a lump removed.
I was in a bad place.
The phone rang. I knew I shouldn't pick it up, but I was in a bad place.
It was "microsoft", and they needed immediate payment to avoid legal action.
I am a little ashamed of what happened next but I dumped every curse word I could think upon that indian guy. It had nothing to do with him really, but I really let him have it.
Honestly, I feel bad looking back at it.
He may have been wrong, but I was wronger.
He is trying to survive like everyone else.. who the hell am I to sit in the comfy first world and judge?
Nothing to be ashamed of. The person on the other end of the phone was a criminal attempting to defraud you. You could have done much worse than just cursing them out.
> He is trying to survive like everyone else.. who the hell am I to sit in the comfy first world and judge?
This line of reasoning ultimately leads to the conclusion that morals only apply in situations where it’s comfortable and convenient to apply them. Perhaps any particular scammer has been the victim of their own set of injustices (or just as likely, perhaps not), but that in no way excuses their victimisation of others. They’re adults too. Not some poor lowly Indians who had no choice but to defraud the vulnerable.
> He is trying to survive like everyone else.. who the hell am I to sit in the comfy first world and judge?
He doesn't know you from a senile person living in poverty. They'll steal your money regardless of who you are. There's no moral justification for that. They are evil.
This. I used to have long commutes. I really enjoyed getting scam calls during the commutes and seeing how long I could keep them on. It was completely a game. I look at it that the longer I can occupy them the less time they have to take advantage of someone else.
These people are the lowest of the low, they prey on the senile and ignorant, stealing from them regardless of their economic status. There should be no pity. If I can end the conversation making the scammer regret their life decisions, or at least waste their time, it's a win.
He generally plays the part of an old person 100% of the time. Also he has a huge following and fans submit numbers to him, so he generally calls them back
> Do you know what Kitboga and the like do to get themselves targeted by scammers?
From my experience: have a phone number. The real reason that I decommissioned my old landline was that it had become unusable: calls at all hours of the day and night, none of which were wanted and most of which were illegitimate.
If I ever get calls like this I'll keep them on the line as long as I can as a kind of game. I get called like maybe once a quarter though.