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Posted

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After ruining Microsoft's reputation for years, and recently also targeting Apple customers, tech support scammers have started picking on Dell's customers with a voracious appetite.

 

During the past year, tens of Dell customers have started reporting being picked on by aggressive tech support scammers that were calling them about their Dell laptops and computers.

 

Unlike typical tech support scams that rely on ads and scareware, or hunt tech support forums for victims, these particular individuals were calling Dell customers that previously had a problem with their laptop in the past, as 10ZenMonkeys reports.

 

Scammers have access to sensitive, private Dell customer data

 

Scammers were not only calling Dell customers at home without the users reporting any issues, but seemed to have access to data like the customer's name, his Dell PC or laptop model, contact information, support history, and Dell's unique service tag and express service code for each computer.

 

The issue is widespread, with numerous users complaining about scammers on Dell's website (1, 2, 3, 4) and other online tech support forums.

 

All the data points to a data breach on Dell's side, to which Dell has refused to officially acknowledge, even if support representatives told 10ZenMonekys that this might have happened.

 

Dell is well aware of the issue, can't protect customers

 

Dell has even issued a public warning about this ongoing scam, but they've been vague when it came to explaining how scammers came to be in possession of sensitive Dell customer information.

 

Regardless if Dell knows about the ongoing scam operation or not, only by educating themselves can user avoid falling victims to such (old school) tricks.

 

Even the FTC took notice last November, after similar tech support campaigns also ramped up against Microsoft, Apple, and Google. Unfortunately, their investigation did not target the same individuals behind this campaign, which many users reported having a classic Indian accent.

 

"We recommend that you not engage such callers, and never give them your credit card information, access to your computer or any other personal information," said Dell's Laura Thomas in the company's statement on this issue. "Remember, if you’re unsure, trust your gut and simply hang up."

 

 

Source:

http://news.softpedia.com/news/dell-has-a-severe-tech-support-scam-problem-498697.shtml

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  • FPCH Admin
Posted

This explains a lot. My Dell Preferred Customer Account was hacked.

I'm playing hell with Dell about it.

You'd think that I would be able to settle this satisfactorily since I am a subcontractor for Dell but NO!

I still am jumping through hoops.:real_anger:

~I know that you believe you understand what you think I said, but I'm not sure you realize that what you heard is not what I meant.~

~~Robert McCloskey~~

Posted
I never get a call from Dell, but almost get calls from Win*ows/Mic*osoft weekly. I knew it's not a real company's number, because the number always changes everytime they call. I always check the number at sites like http://whycall.me to see if people have reported them as scam. I prefer to not giving any of my time answering those calls, since most of those unsolicited calls are just scam calls.
  • FPCH Admin
Posted

Welcome to Free PC Help Forum, Bruce.

 

My daughter gets the fake Microsoft calls all of the time.

~I know that you believe you understand what you think I said, but I'm not sure you realize that what you heard is not what I meant.~

~~Robert McCloskey~~

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