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Spam call. Obviously automated, as it couldn't tell it was being screened:

I just hit the spam and block (google sent the last bit)
Wonder what happens if you press "one" ?
^^^ You've left your mobile number on the screenshot. Probably best to edit your post! 🙂
Time for some fun
Ha ha.
All of STW can also spam you now ?
You’ve left your mobile number on the screenshot
That's the incoming number . Feel free to spam as desired! 😛
Odd set up for this kind of scam. Usually they choose a company you're likely to have heard of but unlikely to be paying money to - Norton / Microsoft. I'd imagine a lot of people receiving the text will have Prime and not suddenly think "I should stop Priming". But what do I know?
There is some new US law, that means companies with subscription services have to warn you and give a chance to cancel before renewal.
1, It could be genuine (are you a prime customer, when is your renewal?)
2, It could be a scam knowing that Americans are likely to know about the law and are getting lots of reminders.
Sounds exactly like a scam. We've had a lot of similar ones claiming to be from PayPal recently - "There has been an unexpected payment of X on your account recently, please press 1 if you would like to cancel it". The first couple of times you aren't sure but after that you know to ignore. If I'm really not sure then I google the number plus 'arnaque' (scam in french) and there is usually a flurry of people getting similar messages aver the last week or so but not earlier so it's a scam. Always good to know what the latest one is
Google virtual calling assistant
Not heard of this. Dos is record all calls in word form like this or just unknown numbers?
It looks like a handy bit of tech.
1, It could be genuine (are you a prime customer, when is your renewal?)
A genuine text from Amazon is unlikely to be coming from a regular-looking mobile number.
It could be genuine (are you a prime customer, when is your renewal?
If it was genuine.. 1) see above
2) it wouldn't have an automated reply to Google's screening
3) Amazon Prime, amazing as it is isn't £79.99
4) there wouldn't be spelling/grammar mistakes (though that could just be the dictatey script getting it wrong)
Check your incoming calls more carefully!
Not heard of this. Dos is record all calls in word form like this or just unknown numbers?
It looks like a handy bit of tech.
Is very handy - it's up to you who you screen - phone rings, you see an unrecognised number, hit call screen and it displays their response. Usually they hang up, so that one was obviously a bot, but you can answer, hang up, or hang up and block the number. It didn't used to save the transcript, so that's an added feature.
hit call screen
Thanks for info!
When I hit call screen, I assume the caller hears that text the op has in the first bubble? Then, if they carry on talking it tells me what they are saying/it is transcribed for me or both?
Cheers.
I assume the caller hears that text the op has in the first bubble?
Yep
Then, if they carry on talking it tells me what they are saying/it is transcribed for me
Yes, just you. You can't reply on the screen, just by answering
^^ Thanks mate, appreciated.
Is very handy – it’s up to you who you screen – phone rings, you see an unrecognised number, hit call screen and it displays their response. Usually they hang up, so that one was obviously a bot, but you can answer, hang up, or hang up and block the number. It didn’t used to save the transcript, so that’s an added feature
Neat. I used the iOS transcribe voicemail thing earlier today to screen a call. Caller did not leave a message. Sad face emoji.
https://support.apple.com/en-gb/105066
Same call - voicemail left this time cos I didn't hear/see it ring. Voicemail is most definitely a bot! Came in from a different mobile number, so wasn't blocked. What a pain.
3) Amazon Prime, amazing as it is isn’t £79.99
The annual fee used to be £95 - but i think was 79.99 when it launched?
I assume the scam works something like this - you press 1. you get connected to an operator who somehow convinces you to part with your card details? either for security for cancellation or by talking you our of the cancelation for a lower value "special offer"...
There is some new US law, that means companies with subscription services have to warn you and give a chance to cancel before renewal.
I don't think its actually started yet and I think it just has to be as easy to quit as it was to sign up - not burried deep in their website then requiring a letter and three phone calls to get out!
The annual fee used to be £95
Yeah, so scamming someone who pays monthly by saying it's 79.99 is really not going to work. (Unless they are dumb enough to not reailse they pay monthly.)
Just got a physical letter from the national bank of Belgium (it's a thing) warning me that next week I will get a phone call from them about a national survey. It's interesting that that's the level people have to go to now as it's not easy to trust phone calls any more