So I get a text “Busy?” I ask “Who?” and I get “Isn’t this Anna?” and it doesn’t stop there. She wants to apologize for bothering me, then she tells what a polite person I am, and where do I live etc. It’s a slow day, so I keep sending her one or two-word answers, and she doesn’t take the hint that pursuing this will lead nowhere. I guess my question is “What sort of a scam is this, and what do I need to watch out for?” Is this a lonely person I need to feel sorry for, which I doubt, or someone trying to play me?
“She” just texted me “Can you tell me my name?” and I texted back “Your name is Amy.”
What does this signify? Non-native speaker? Inattentive person pulling off nine scams at once? Stupid person? If the latter, then I’m being mean by playing her, right? So maybe I should just stop and find something productive to do with my time?
To fuck with scammers and waste their time. Maybe distract them from potential victims.
Though I wouldn’t use my actual phone number because of possible retaliation. A burner phone or Google Voice number would solve that.
I have the time for it (and its fun) though I do email, even with a Google Voice number, I don’t like texting and I don’t want texts in the middle of the night.
I think whenever I have to ask “Is this a scam?” I can be confident the answer is Yes.
Seems like an awful lot of trouble on “her” part, though, to persist through all my non-communicative answers (“Yes” “OK” “Sure”) to her many questions. Almost all of my answers were provided by my cel phone, so I just had to click once to give it, followed by a long question, or revelation, on “her” part. It really felt like I was playing “her,” stringing her along with this shit and obviously very leery of giving “her” any useful information, like my name or the city I live in. Just to establish a personal relationship,“she” had to waste several texts pretending to be trying to contact someone else, thanking me profusely for my politeness in telling “her” that “she” had misdialed, etc. Seems very inefficient as a scam, but what do I know? I’m not a scammer.
I would not think ‘scam’ in as much ‘trap’ - keep stringing ‘her’ along long enough, there will be pictures requested and or sent - if sent, then they have you with potential blackmail goods (i’;ll go to the cops/SO, etc unless you pay me).
The other day, I received a text that said “Hi, I’m going to Miami for vacation in mid-May, are you still there?” Now this is plausibly real, since I live an hour from Miami. The text was from area code 909, which is California, and I have friends there. However - I can’t think of a single friend that I wouldn’t have the number for AND wouldn’t use my name in their initial text. I didn’t reply, and they haven’t tried again.
When it happened, I did some searching, and found a few articles about the general idea. Basically, it’s engagement to try to draw you into…something. A sale of some sort, typically, although I could imagine a malware pushing scheme via a link.
My guess is catfishing. A few times, I would say, “I think I remember you from the party, can you send me a picture” and it has been the same attractive Asian woman picture that shows up, probably taken from the web somewhere.
One time, I grabbed a picture from a previous text and said, Oh my god, we look so much alike! We should get together, and then that was the end of that chat.
Funny… do you suppose if i sent a really rude message that no same woman would be unoffended by that i would get a friendly reply to? EG, "send pix? I’ve had bad experiences with really ugly women on the internet "
I get a fair number of those “wrong number” texts. I just ignore them, instead of baiting them (though that can be fun), because that is the quickest way to make them give up and go away. They are scammers, and they want something from you.
I do appreciate, and watch, clever scam-baiters, like Kitboga. They are quite entertaining, and they waste the time (and sometimes shut down) of scammers who prey on the naivety of innocents (mainly the elderly).
I have a friend in cyber security, and he says you should never respond to those things even if it is only to entertain yourself in jest. Just responding will get you on more selective lists that will yield even more phishing attempts.