I believe @Foreign_Hacker wrote up a script to feed it bogus information to speed up poisoning the data they are collecting. That can probably be pointed at this one as well ;)
@drwat#146364 @Otis#146366 I listened to this. I have gotten a few of these from people trying to Phish for info. I give them all fake info and it accepts it. I cannot believe people do not hang up and call the number on the back of their card when they get calls like this. I just called and gave them all fake info again and it took it. Anybody who falls for this has to be really not very smart. I am not surprised at any of the rotten things people will stoop to for money. I reported it to Chase. THey were surprised to hear it. They dont know these scams???
I'm looking forward to the scammers phoning up Chase and saying that their name is Phelma Tittz or Willie Fistergash.
No doubt it is a scam though. It says that it has managed to verify my account details using the phone number I called from. Given that this phone number is a random 10 digit number generated by Asterisk, I doubt that very much.
I gave a bunch of fake information to the robot and it still worked. Crazy. Asks you for everything, even the pin you enter when you go to the atm machine. Banks wouldn’t ask for such. Usually, it’s the last digits of your card to confirm, not the full card number including the 3 digit code on the back and everything.
@drwat#146396 These multi-million and multi-billion dollar companies could actually do something to aid in the fight against scammers, they would be helping a lot of their customers that end up being victims. It baffles me as to why these companies turn a blind eye to such a massive issue
These scammers aren't quite as sophisticated as the previous lot. They aren't checking SSNs or credit card numbers to see if they're technically valid and I don't think they're doing any speech recognition on the customer names.