Some weirdos are calling me from "microsoft"


Recommended Posts

Some weirdo with india accent are calling me from what they claim to be Microsoft in California. They say my computer is sending them error report and that its been downloading malicious software that I'm not aware of. He will help me fix it on the phone. Tells me to go to the event log viewer and look for red errors. I found a couple of those then he tells me to go to their official Microsoft support page at this URL

<snipped>

When I see the page I start to laugh and he tells me again this is the official Microsoft website. Then he wants me to click some links their and some weird .exe file is being downloaded. He wants me to click it and I tell him I wont and I hang up.

Then a few mins after he calls back, I don't answer and he calls and calls and calls like crazy several times :)

Anyone else experienced this ?

I've never personally experienced this but damn this is one persistent mother...

As you've already figured out that site is definitely bogus lol.

Anyway I would ask for his employee ID and tell him you're going to report him to redmond for harassing you. See if that works. If it doesn't then I would say call the phone company and/or the police and report the number and the nature of the call.

I have not experienced any of those calls personally, but I have read about them. There are a couple of related articles I read on ArsTechnica late last year that you will probably find amusing.

?Hello, I?m definitely not calling from India. Can I take control of your PC??

How Windows tech support scammers walked right into a trap set by the feds

This happened to my mum a few months back. Thankfully I was visiting that weekend so she passed the phone to me.

Them: Hello, this is <X> from Microsoft. We're getting a lot of reports from your machine and we believe you have a virus.

Me: Ok...can I ask how you know which machine the warning is coming from? I have several machines running on this network.

Them: Ah, I can give you the <something>ID if you would like to check that?

Me: The what?

Them: The <something>ID.

Me: No, that won't work I'm afraid. But do you have an IP address? <note: I knew it was a scam, and I knew that even if they could provide an IP it wouldn't allow me to find the "infected" machine on the network.>

Them: No sir, but the <something>ID should be evidence enough...

Me: Ok, let's stop dicking one another around, shall we? I work in IT and I know that Microsoft would not contact me for a virus issue. I've asked you for a simple request, which if you are who you say you are you could either answer or tell me that the IP address wouldn't work.

Them: ...sooo, do you want us to fix the virus issue?

Me: There is no virus issue. You're trying to scam my mother.

Them: <disconnect>

I wish I had been more awake, I could have had some great fun with them.

" When I see the page I start to laugh and he tells me again this is the official Microsoft website. Then he wants me to click some links their and some weird .exe file is being downloaded. He wants me to click it and I tell him I wont and I hang up."

so correct me if i'm wrong

1. he directs you to a website that isn't the official MS website

2. it downloads a dodgy .exe file

3. you saved it

..... It might be malware and no as you described it be isnt from MS so........ keyloggers - no wonder he wants you to pick up, so he can direct you again and check for keystrokes

I want to get one of these calls and actually play along. I'd do it in a VM or spare machine and see what they actually are trying to accomplish and then call them out on it at the end.

I want to get one of these calls and actually play along. I'd do it in a VM or spare machine and see what they actually are trying to accomplish and then call them out on it at the end.

I've seen times where they have pointed the user to their driver folder under Windows and said, "you see all these files? Those are viruses. I shall delete them for you to clean the system." Sometimes they'll also install a program that will block your browser with a window that demands you pay "the government" ?150 to unlock it.

one of the sad issues about this too is the people doing the calling almost ALWAYS don't know they are scamming either. desperate for a job, they reply to a "call center" ad they see, meet with the scam boss, he trains them for a day, teaches them what to say, tells them Microsoft contracts out to him, and then they go to "work" and they make a commission based sale if they "make the sale". You ever notice the people you talk to don't sound very computer literate? its because they are new to the job.

  • Like 2

A while back we used to get them quite a lot and each times just drag it out as long as i can and then either say i'm using Linux or OSX. Another good one is pretend you're robbing the place. Amazing how some still keep calm and still ask you to check the PC :laugh:

These idiots call me every week almost.

One time that these people called my house, he said he was from "In your computer". I asked him how he managed to get in there, and whether he would like me to let him out.

He hung up.

Other times I do the "how many times can you say meow before the other person catches on" routine.

It's fun to see how long you can keep them on the phone.

I received two or three calls like that since 2009. The first couple of times, I responded with "Sorry, there are no computers in my house." The last time they called me was on a bad day so I told them to **** off.

The way they usually trick the average user is have them look in the "Event Log" and tell them "See all those errors" ... either A) your computer has a lot of problems or B) You have a lot of viruses. I've known a few customers that did believe them.

I did get a call from them once. I told them they were bull****.

Other times I do the "how many times can you say meow before the other person catches on" routine.

It's fun to see how long you can keep them on the phone.

Get your friend or someone else in the house to pick up the other phone and play repeat...

02448612_.jpg

I want to get one of these calls and actually play along. I'd do it in a VM or spare machine and see what they actually are trying to accomplish and then call them out on it at the end.

Too late - ars already did it. :D

My mum has had a few of these, and each time she asks me if she was right to say no. The fact that a degree educated woman asks shows one thing...

These clearly work. Other people clearly do follow their instruction. Else they'd have stopped doing this years ago.

I read a post on Reddit once when a guy got a call from them and he booted up a virtual machine real quick and had them do their thing on the virtual machine, just to see what they wanted to do. And they were bringing up the event log and claiming that benign events were horrible errors and that they could "fix" if for you for a cost.

Some weirdo with india accent are calling me from what they claim to be Microsoft in California. They say my computer is sending them error report and that its been downloading malicious software that I'm not aware of. He will help me fix it on the phone. Tells me to go to the event log viewer and look for red errors. I found a couple of those then he tells me to go to their official Microsoft support page at this URL

<snipped>

When I see the page I start to laugh and he tells me again this is the official Microsoft website. Then he wants me to click some links their and some weird .exe file is being downloaded. He wants me to click it and I tell him I wont and I hang up.

Then a few mins after he calls back, I don't answer and he calls and calls and calls like crazy several times.

Anyone else experienced this ?

When I get these kinds of calls I just say ... "I'm sitting here naked ... are you ?" :shifty:

I've had these a few times. They are a pain in the arse.

He asked me to click on loads of things, getting me into event viewer's system log and told me the errors and warning were viruses. (I can see how the uninformed fall for this).

He then got me to go to their website and type in the code.

I then told him I worked in IT and he is a scammer..

The next bit shocked me so much......

He admitted to it, told me it's a great way to earn money and then proceeded to tell me he holds the "Scamming Record" within the place :o

I couldn't believe it.

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • This makes me think of Dune for some reason.
    • I'm too old to return to the "good old days" when I was installing custom ROMs and tinkering with my devices - now I just want to turn it on and use it. I've read that banking and payment apps work on Murena /e/OS (I'll have to check the ones I use) and I also really want to support Fairphone 😉
    • Time to start going to the local church and play Bingo for a while.
    • NVIDIA announces 35 new AI HPC supercomputers across Europe by Fiza Ali NVIDIA has announced that 35 AI high-performance computing (HPC) supercomputers are planned to open throughout Europe this year. This marks what the company describes as the largest single-year expansion of AI infrastructure in the history of the continent. These new systems, unveiled at ISC High Performance 2026, will be placed at a number of national supercomputing centres, AI factories, and research institutes to provide advanced computing resources to more than three million researchers. Describing AI, NVIDIA founder and CEO Jensen Huang stated, "AI is the new instrument of science, and Europe is building the infrastructure to put it in the hands of millions of researchers." Built on NVIDIA's Blackwell and Hopper architectures, the new systems will support research in climate science, healthcare, clean energy, quantum computing, and other scientific fields. Among the major projects are the Barcelona Supercomputing Center's MareNostrum 5 AI upgrade, BavariaAI's Blue Swan platform in Germany, Italy's IT4LIA AI factory, Germany's HammerHAI project, and Sweden's Mimer AI Factory. The Barcelona Supercomputing Center plans to expand MareNostrum 5 with NVIDIA GB300 NVL72 and GB200 NVL4 systems. In total, the BSC expects to deliver up to 20 exaflops of AI training performance and 33 exaflops of AI inference performance. This increased computational capability will support research efforts related to climate modelling, biotechnology, energy systems, etc. Furthermore, as part of the IT4LIA project, more than 8,000 GPUs, each based on NVIDIA’s GB200 NVL4 architecture, will be used in Italy. This represents one of the largest AI factory initiatives announced to date. Additionally, the Blue Swan platform from BavariaAI will include about 1,000 GPUs to help develop multimodal AI models for use in the medical field, robotics, and various areas of scientific research. NVIDIA also emphasized in the announcement how rapidly growth of accelerated computing usage is taking place within both energy and climate-related research. The company said Siemens Energy uses NVIDIA-powered technologies to significantly accelerate the process of designing and simulating hydrogen-capable gas turbines. Using those same acceleration technologies, Siemens was able to reduce simulation time by up to 77 percent. The company also highlighted several quantum computing initiatives across Europe. CINECA, EuroHPC, and Pasqal are integrating a quantum processing unit into Italy's CINECA supercomputing centre using NVIDIA's CUDA-Q platform. Meanwhile, researchers at Germany's Julich Supercomputing Centre recently simulated a universal 50-qubit quantum computer on the JUPITER supercomputer. The announcement demonstrates Europe's continued commitment to building out its infrastructure supporting AI and supercomputing as governments, research organizations, and technology companies compete to build out their respective computing capacities and secure their positions in advanced scientific research.
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      508
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      203
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      98
    4. 4
      Michael Scrip
      82
    5. 5
      neufuse
      67
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!