I got a call from someone purporting to be from Yahoo Tech Support. He informed me that 10 minutes earlier, somebody had attempted to change a recovery method for my account. They said that because the person provided information that sounded legit, they did change the recovery method. I informed him it wasn't me. He said he could take off the new phone number but that I had to verify that I'm the owner of my phone number (current recovery method). I had to read off a code that he would text me. When I questioned how I could be sure he was actually from Yahoo Support he provided a ticket # and a "customer number" that identifies him. He sent the code but i refused to read it to him. I told him I'd call back so i could verify i was actually talking to Yahoo Support. Then he said ok and hung up. Does Yahoo Tech Support actually call people? I'm pretty sure this was a scam call. Thoughts?

Ive been getting daily direct calls from "Yahoo Support." The automated number they used is 1-888-418-7804. The automated voice asked if I requested to change my number, if no press 1, if Yes, hang up, and have a nice day. I pressed 1 for no. Then it asked if i received the code, which I didnt, and to press 1 to re-send it. This was my first sign that this was a fake. I pressed 1 and i was sent an authentic code. Then it asked me to input this code. I immediately knew this is the code they needed to steal my account, so I hung up. I immediately got a live call from "yahoo support" Number 515-337-2913 Iowa. The British accent person asked if I received the automated calls, I said yes, then he said that he can help me fix the issue, he just needed my backup email to confirm my ID ( more phishing). I asked him who he was, he said yahoo support of course. I asked him what number is he calling from, he said uh lets see, then he repeated the 515 number. The I asked where are you calling me from, he said lowa, LOL. I said from where !? He said lowa again LOL He mistakenly confused the I in Iowa for an L, LOL! He then said its a state in the US LOL. I then asked for his address, he said its uh, hold on, then he hung up LOL. I called him back at the 515 number and it came back as a google number LOL Super fake. The moral of the story is, these guys will go through any length to get any info from you. Dont confirm or tell them anything. Just go to account and change your password. I hope this helps anyone, and make sure to alert family and friends.


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The blizzard that forced the NFL to postpone the playoff game between the Bills and Pittsburgh Steelers is over, but the snow it dumped on the area was still blanketing Highmark Stadium. The Bills, who had already been paying locals to shovel snow overnight, put out another call for shovelers early Monday.

On 10-5-16 I began to get calls from scammers saying they were working for tech support at a company called

TechLiveConnect.com, which was just changed to PremiumTechSupport.com and I had a refund coming. I called the

company I had done business with for info at 877-958-7560, but was transferred to the scammers IN MID CALL. Later, I

got 4 calls from 408-610-4900, some seconds apart, from different live techs wanting to work on my computer all

supposedly from Avangate (the parent company to PremiumTechSupport and TechLiveConnect) but they were all telling

me to call them back at the number I called in the first place which started the scam: 877-958-7560

(PremiumTechSupport.com & TechLiveConnect.com.) I've gotten 15 calls from 408-610-4900 between 10-5-16 and 12-

15-16 when they may have changed numbers. 

 

Now the really strange part.

On 12-31-16, and again on 1-12-17, I was logging into my email and had to get a verification code from Yahoo so I had

Yahoo call my phone. The verification code came from 408-610-4900, the EXACT SAME NUMBER THE SCAMMERS HAD

USED for the past 3 months. That's quite a coincidence!!!

The 4 calls mentioned above could not have come from Yahoo because my computer was turned off. I was not using my

email. It was not a recorded voice reading numbers, those were real people wanting me to log into my bank account.

When I looked up the number months ago, it was registered to a known spammer, not Yahoo.

 

I would like to hear from Yahoo what the actual number is which the verification code call is supposed to come from but

there is nobody to talk to there. Does anyone remember what number Yahoo's verification calls came from before 12-15-16?

I receive numerous spoofed calls. Some are numbers like "000-000-0000" which is an impossible number. Once I had a call that was literally 1one digit incremented from my phone number. The US FTC sponsored a RoboCall challenge. The winner won $50,000 and setup a system that uses "Simultaneous Ring" in what is called NoMoRobo. This service is based upon the capability of a Phone Company to send a call to two numbers simultaneously. For example a call can come in and ring at both one's Home Phone and Cell Phone. NoMoRobo's toll free number has also been spoofed.

I was called again yesterday and they are now hiding their numbers completely, probably because I've reported every number from them to the feds. However, I can still get info about the nameless, numberless person calling through more legal channels, and I am formulating a legal request for info at this time. If necessary, I can also subpoena the info.

#3. I have never given anyone any info allowing them to access my email. Besides, I change the long passwords more regularly and use multiple verification security. I guess the fact that they are still calling could mean they still don't have whatever they are looking for.

#7. I really liked finding local repair techs willing to make house calls for no extra charge. The work gets done faster and I can see everything being done. Unlike Best Buy which has a turn around time of 2 weeks and I can't watch or the remote techs from HP who change things to how "they" want them and will absolutely refuse to put them back the way "I" want them. Everyone does things differently so if I call back and tell a new tech to undo something, they have no idea what it was originally so they can't. In the past it has taken up to 3 months for most unwanted changes to be reset by the very techs who messed them up in the first place, if they could do it at all, and most couldn't.

Some times company's sell data they collect to make an extra income and it can make it's way to less dubious company's/people so when filling in forms you have to look at the small print. Even well known company's have call centres where people details have gone missing ie stolen and sold. I find it is best to use a throw away mobile you can dump and a charged card so even if some one does get the phone number and card details the card will be dead and in a fake name and the phone is in a dummy name and all you have to then do is just replace them. All perfectly legal the only one who will know your details for the card will be the bank you get it from and you can ask for the card in any name you choose.

Things have quieted down in the past month. I only got the 1 call on January 17 from the same guy who tried to get into my bank account. He was nice enough to identify himself!! I guess they got tired of me reporting them and their phone numbers because the number was hidden for that call. I was able to get info about calls to and from my phone through my service provider and for that call, the guy changed his number to appear as mine. Therefore the official phone record looks like I used my phone to dial my phone to have a conversation with myself.

The Yahoo! Messenger app has received a pretty significant upgrade today -- the app now lets you make video and voice calls to Yahoo! Messenger friends. That has a few interesting outcomes, the first of which is that you can now make video calls from any iPhone running iOS 4.1 to anywhere with a Yahoo! Messenger account, including back to PCs running the client there. We haven't had a chance to try it out yet, but the app is a free download, so you can see for yourself if you want. You can also make free voice calls between friends, or for an extra fee, call out to phones around the world.


 One caveat: the calls don't seem to work on the iPod touch 4G, according to reviewers on the App Store. We're not sure why that would be, but the app description clearly states that service is only for iPhone 3GS/4. Otherwise, here's one more solution to voice and even video chatting over 3G on your iPhone.

Your client needs to extract the authorization code and exchange it for an accesstoken using a call to the /get_token endpoint. The response also contains therefresh token, which persists even when the user changespasswords. The authorization server may issue a new refresh token, in which casethe client must discard the old refresh token and replace it with thenew refresh token. The authorization server will revoke the oldrefresh token after issuing a new refresh token to the client.The refresh token can also be invalidated if the user revokes accessthrough Yahoo account settings.

Hey Yahoo! is the result of an exciting partnership between Game Show Network (GSN) and Yahoo, combining entertainment with digital utility. The show is a brainchild of GameShow Enterprises Studios, specifically designed for GSN. Rane Laymance and Brian Provost serve as executive producers for GSN and Yahoo respectively, with additional executive production by Al Hassas of Sweet Lemons, LLC, and Dean Tempest of Big Potato Limited.


Talk about night and day: Steve Ballmer got very used to pushing back or just plain ignoring entreaties from former Yahoo CEO Jerry Yang to buy the company in the aftermath of the train wreck that was Yang's rejection of Microsoft's proposal to buy the company. Now, Ballmer's waiting for even a second call from Yang's successor, Carol Bartz, to maybe talk about a relatively minor search partnership. 0852c4b9a8

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