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Steve Bennett blogs

Whenever: exploring times and places in film and books Alternative Earth: a procedurally generated map using vector tiles Host your own vector tile server on Glitch Building TinyMap: an itty bitty collaborative mapping tool You might not need PostGIS: streamlined vector tile processing for big map visualisations OpenStreetMap vector tiles: mixing and matching engines, schemas and styles 2015’s proudest moments Your own personal National Map with TerriaJS: no coding and nothing to deploy After the hackathon: 4 classic recipes OpenTrees.org: how to aggregate 373,000 trees from 9 open data sources Cycletour.org: a better map for Australian cycle tours Normalize cross-tabs for Tableau: a free Google Sheets tool 7 reasons to release that government dataset The Data Guru in Residence Chromecast in the real world: six casting workflows Web map projections: the bare minimum you need to know Multivariate binary symbol maps with TileMill. The Australian’s menacing editorial Cycletouring and OpenStreetMapping: a beautiful symbiosis Git: what they didn’t tell you One week of Salt: frustrations and reflections. Super lightweight map websites with Github Digital humanities for beginners: get started with the Trove API Trello Tennis Terrain in TileMill: a walkthrough for non-GIS types A TileMill server with all the trimmings Forget trying to remember your servers’ names! Anonymous longitudinal surveys with LimeSurvey What I learned at e-Research Australasia 2012 A pattern for multi-instrument data harvesting with MyTardis Getting started with Chef on the NeCTAR Research Cloud How OData will solve data sharing and reuse for e-Research 10 things I hate about Git Semantic Google keywords Improving on the “administration rights required” workflow Why is buying stuff from eBay so complicated? Introducing: Cooking for engineers New Gmail feature: auto mailing list management Penny Auctions – a bit of analysis Hello world!
Windows red cross errors scam
steveko · 2012-12-12 · via Steve Bennett blogs

Posted by on December 12, 2012


Image

We have noticed many red cross errors!

I just received an interesting phone call, apparently from a group of Indian scammers. It went roughly like this. (Phrases in bold are things I jotted down during the call)

  • Hello, I’m Caroline from the Computer Technical Department at Windows Best Help [or Windows Based Help, perhaps]. We’re calling to alert you that for the past four weeks you’ve been receiving red cross errors, which mean you’re subject to internet viruses, and hackers that are trying to break into your computer. Your address is [my address], correct?

Throughout this, I give non-committal “mmm, yes” responses.

  • We’re connected through the Global IT Server. This just an awareness call, nothing to do with telemarketing.
  • Now, go to the home page of your browser.
  • Now press Windows-R, and type “cookies“. [Actually, long description of how to find the Windows key, and spelling out “cookies” in radio code. The first “o” was orange, the second was Oscar.]
  • Now, do you see all those files and folders? All the work you’re doing is stored in those files as a double coded check up.

Image

I’m calling from the Computer Technical Department at Windows Best Help. This has nothing to do with telemarketing!

At this point, she transferred me to her “technical supervisor”. He gave me his name, but I didn’t quite catch it – something like Armin. I asked where they’re based – Kolkata.

  • Are you in front of your computer now? [I admitted that, no, the phone was in a different room.]
  • But I believe that you told Caroline that you were typing the commands and could see the results? [Interesting…I had led her to believe that. Is their operation so small that he listens to the whole conversation?]

Some confusion followed, where I offered to go and run the command for real. I told him to hold the line for a minute, while I went and did it. When he came back, the line was dead. Oops.

I’ve heard of this scam before, but it was entertaining to see it in operation. Too bad I didn’t get to see where it led.